It's unclear to me also. He seems to want to share a press in the field that guarantees precise shoulder set-back from one die to another? I don't believe he grasps the fact that not every piece of brass workhardens at the same rate- no matter if from the same lot, fired and sized the same # of times with the same loads. ....or that variations in shoulder set-back affects accuracy adversely.
Yes I understand completely about how the brass property changes by the number of firings and different lot #s.
I shoot 6mm Dasher the dies are available, but the brass has to be made by fire forming. So there is not brass to set head space from. A new brass is not a head space gauge by no means. It may give you a rough estimate guess about where you are setting the head space.
If you are setting the head space you set it up just like you do when setting a die up to bump the shoulder to get the perfect feel of bolt closure.
I been reloading for years as well. Lyman is the first set of dies I had. I have talked to Redding about this as well. They set there dies with a .008 bump at the factory and .005 on 40 degree shoulders. This in itself tells me that it tells me that it may be my die tho I would still have to bump the shoulder even if I shaved .003 off the bottom of it. Because it takes .0105 to achieve the .0015 bump that I'm looking for, for the feel of a good bolt closure.
The shell holders are a standard .125 I don't care who makes it. The dies on the other hand are not , they do set it up from the datum line which is mid shoulder to the base of the case.
The question was to make it where I can set my die up and form my brass with any press to fit my rifle and do away with bumping the shoulder? And setup the die normally with a standard shell holder.
And where would you correct the problem of having to bump the shoulder, would you lengthen the chamber by add to the base of the head space gauge, or off the bottom of the die?
After going back and reading my question of the first post. It was suppose to be add to the head space gauge.. Sorry! After all the info that has been shared it has been very helpful.
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