I've been shooting Highpower for a few years and thought I had this issue figured out until my son bought a R700 5-R and we had to recalibrate the .223 FL bushing sizer to those fired cases.
We were chambering and resizing and chambering and gauging and measuring and comparing and I discovered to my horror that when chambering a resized case in the AR the shoulder is setback .003 - .004. No firing here just chambering. Granted this is a relatively violent operation.
I've been told this is "normal" but I wasn't comfortable with it so I have subsequently increased the setback for the brass for the AR to .004.
Accuracy (and scores) have improved.
Is this indeed normal practice?
I'm concerned now about too much setback.
I know most of you folks are BR bolt folks but I've found this forum to be more quantitative and thus informative.
We were chambering and resizing and chambering and gauging and measuring and comparing and I discovered to my horror that when chambering a resized case in the AR the shoulder is setback .003 - .004. No firing here just chambering. Granted this is a relatively violent operation.
I've been told this is "normal" but I wasn't comfortable with it so I have subsequently increased the setback for the brass for the AR to .004.
Accuracy (and scores) have improved.
Is this indeed normal practice?
I'm concerned now about too much setback.
I know most of you folks are BR bolt folks but I've found this forum to be more quantitative and thus informative.