HI6818,
Ronemus might have given you the answer you are looking for on the first reply from your OP.
As I understand it, on your your tight neck XP, the same dies/bushings are producing no runout issues. Probably because the amount of of constriction the bushing produces between the fired case neck and the sized case neck is <.005.
Your Encore probably has a sloppier chamber, producing a larger OD on the fired case neck. When you try to use the same bushing, you get more constriction which produces runout. YOu may have to size it in increments - use a larger bushing first, then a smaller busing to get the desired neck tension....And IME the bushing you use maynot always produce a linear result WRT sized neck diameter.
Example: I have a 243Win that produces .275' fired case neck, very concentric. When I use a .270 bushing, I get a .268' case neck with great concentricity,.0005-.0015 TIR). Loaded neck diameter is .2705' and this neck tension works well in my load. When I use a .268 bushing, I get way more runout, typically .0015-.004 TIR. When I use a .271 bushing, I get low runout, but .270 sized neck - not enough tension. It's all about how much you are shoving the brass around in a single operation. You'll have to measure the OD of the fired cases from both chambers to see if this applies to you.
As an alternative, you may get some relief from 'partial neck sizing' using Redding S F/L dies just not screwed in all the way to achieve shoulder bump. Sometimes the contact of the brass on the sidewalls of the case inside the dies helps center up the case such that the neck sizes more concentric. This can be tricky to set up as it may push your shoulders forward from the die wall/case wall contact.
Please report back.
Elkbane
Ronemus might have given you the answer you are looking for on the first reply from your OP.
As I understand it, on your your tight neck XP, the same dies/bushings are producing no runout issues. Probably because the amount of of constriction the bushing produces between the fired case neck and the sized case neck is <.005.
Your Encore probably has a sloppier chamber, producing a larger OD on the fired case neck. When you try to use the same bushing, you get more constriction which produces runout. YOu may have to size it in increments - use a larger bushing first, then a smaller busing to get the desired neck tension....And IME the bushing you use maynot always produce a linear result WRT sized neck diameter.
Example: I have a 243Win that produces .275' fired case neck, very concentric. When I use a .270 bushing, I get a .268' case neck with great concentricity,.0005-.0015 TIR). Loaded neck diameter is .2705' and this neck tension works well in my load. When I use a .268 bushing, I get way more runout, typically .0015-.004 TIR. When I use a .271 bushing, I get low runout, but .270 sized neck - not enough tension. It's all about how much you are shoving the brass around in a single operation. You'll have to measure the OD of the fired cases from both chambers to see if this applies to you.
As an alternative, you may get some relief from 'partial neck sizing' using Redding S F/L dies just not screwed in all the way to achieve shoulder bump. Sometimes the contact of the brass on the sidewalls of the case inside the dies helps center up the case such that the neck sizes more concentric. This can be tricky to set up as it may push your shoulders forward from the die wall/case wall contact.
Please report back.
Elkbane