M16 said:I just picked up a 6mm AI. The gun came with two dies. A neck sizer and a bullet seat die. Will I need another die to push the shoulder back on occasion or an I good to go. Would the Redding Body Die work?
bigedp51 said:And Hornady makes a cartridge case headspace gauge that can measure a fired case and a resized case and it is far more accurate than a Wilson gauge.
If you intend to run loads in the mid to upper load window, it is not a question of IF you need to push shoulders back, but WHEN. Annealing might delay the need for a cycle or two, but some cases out of the batch will start getting hard to chamber causing all sorts of problems.dalej said:If your rifle has been "gunsmith chambered" your smith should supply you with short piece of barrel reamed shoulder deep. That is your chambers' shoulder datum cup to measure shoulder bump and headspace, when used with caliper. The headspace should be recorded each time cartridge is loaded (doing this will indicate the "headspace sweet spot" for easy feeding and peak accuracy with minimum shoulder setback required). If you pay attention to this measurement there will be no need for shoulder bump die. Regular annealing of neck and shoulder will keep cartridge sizing consistent. To say you need to FL size or NK size or bump shoulders back would be misleading. You need the headspace data to self determine the sizing required for peak performance. Wilson makes case gauges for most cartridges.