I am brand new to reloading and this whole case "sizing" thing has me stumped. I have just been following the directions that came with my dies for set up (turn die down until it touches shell holder then back off a little bit), putting the brass in, and then pulling the lever down. I had an idea what the process was doing, but didn't fully understand all the different pieces of the process.
So, I'd like to please clarify a couple things so that I will do the correct process in the future:
1) get a headspace gauge. This will tell me what the length of my chamber is by measuring the fired, unsized cartridge to within about .003" due to spring back. A once fired "new" piece of brass should be used for this because it hasn't undergone all the stretching of multiple firings.
2) get a neck sizing die to just reform the neck of the case only so I can get the bullet in for seating. Neck sizing increases case life.
3) every fifth reloading of a case, use my full length sizing die. This makes sure the case is not getting stretched too far out of whack where it will have trouble fitting in the chamber.
4) use a blowtorch and anneal the cartridge neck every fifth reloading to increase case life. Do this before sizing.
Now, how do I use the info I get from the headspace gauge? When do I know if my cartridge needs to have its shoulder bumped back? Do I just go by the general feel of when I chamber the cartridge before shooting? If it is difficult to chamber do I assume it is because the shoulder is too far forward? Do I then measure the length of that cartridge using my headspace gauge? If it is too long then I need to bump the shoulder?
Also, when using the headspace gauge is it safe to assume that the brass measurement is an accurate representation of the gun's actual headspace as long as the cartridge can be chambered easily? Do I need to also do this test I've read about people removing the firing pin from their bolt and letting it fall into place, and if it goes 2/3 of the way on its own then the cartridge is the correct size?
Last, when it comes time to bump the shoulder back, how do I know how much more to screw the die down? Once it hits the shell holder and cannot go any further and it is not bumping the shoulder, what then? Or is this actually an issue? Do FL dies generally over-bump the case, requiring a person to actually back off the die and screw it out? If you are doing this, how do you know how much to back it off? Is it by trial and error using multiple cases? I have heard of these Redding shell holders that are thinner than normal that you use in sequence until you get the correct cartridge base to shoulder measurement. I don't understand how this works, as you are taking the case further away from the die and therefore pushing the shoulder back less and less.
Thanks for any help.
So, I'd like to please clarify a couple things so that I will do the correct process in the future:
1) get a headspace gauge. This will tell me what the length of my chamber is by measuring the fired, unsized cartridge to within about .003" due to spring back. A once fired "new" piece of brass should be used for this because it hasn't undergone all the stretching of multiple firings.
2) get a neck sizing die to just reform the neck of the case only so I can get the bullet in for seating. Neck sizing increases case life.
3) every fifth reloading of a case, use my full length sizing die. This makes sure the case is not getting stretched too far out of whack where it will have trouble fitting in the chamber.
4) use a blowtorch and anneal the cartridge neck every fifth reloading to increase case life. Do this before sizing.
Now, how do I use the info I get from the headspace gauge? When do I know if my cartridge needs to have its shoulder bumped back? Do I just go by the general feel of when I chamber the cartridge before shooting? If it is difficult to chamber do I assume it is because the shoulder is too far forward? Do I then measure the length of that cartridge using my headspace gauge? If it is too long then I need to bump the shoulder?
Also, when using the headspace gauge is it safe to assume that the brass measurement is an accurate representation of the gun's actual headspace as long as the cartridge can be chambered easily? Do I need to also do this test I've read about people removing the firing pin from their bolt and letting it fall into place, and if it goes 2/3 of the way on its own then the cartridge is the correct size?
Last, when it comes time to bump the shoulder back, how do I know how much more to screw the die down? Once it hits the shell holder and cannot go any further and it is not bumping the shoulder, what then? Or is this actually an issue? Do FL dies generally over-bump the case, requiring a person to actually back off the die and screw it out? If you are doing this, how do you know how much to back it off? Is it by trial and error using multiple cases? I have heard of these Redding shell holders that are thinner than normal that you use in sequence until you get the correct cartridge base to shoulder measurement. I don't understand how this works, as you are taking the case further away from the die and therefore pushing the shoulder back less and less.
Thanks for any help.