Chambers and dies vary in size, a skinny chamber and a fat die may not squeeze the case shoulder forward. But a fat chamber and a skinny die will squeeze the case shoulder forward.
And if the case shoulder isn't touched by the die then keep shooting the case and full length resizing it. Two things can happen, the die will eventually push the shoulder back the desired amount. Or the case will make the bolt hard to close because the shoulder is never touched by the die.
Below for some reason your die is not pushing the case shoulder back below the red dotted line. And most dies will squeeze the shoulder forward and push the shoulder back more than needed if the die contacts the shell holder.
You could measure a "fired" case at three points along the case body and measure at the same points after sizing and see how much the diameter is reduced.
And if the case shoulder isn't touched by the die then keep shooting the case and full length resizing it. Two things can happen, the die will eventually push the shoulder back the desired amount. Or the case will make the bolt hard to close because the shoulder is never touched by the die.
Below for some reason your die is not pushing the case shoulder back below the red dotted line. And most dies will squeeze the shoulder forward and push the shoulder back more than needed if the die contacts the shell holder.
You could measure a "fired" case at three points along the case body and measure at the same points after sizing and see how much the diameter is reduced.
