How far can shoulders be safely bumped? Fiddling with die depth and some went back .08 - .010". How will that affect accuracy when others are pushed back .001-.003"?
Your question depends on chamber pressure, brass strength, chamber dimensions and resizing die dimensions. The thumb rule of bumping the shoulder back .001 to .002 is to insure longer case life and preventing the case from stretching beyond its elastic limits.
At 38,000 cup or 42,000 psi the chamber pressure is not great enough to make my 30-30 cases stretch. And I have cases 25 to 30 years old that fail of split necks and never of case head separation. On these 30-30 cases the primer always protrude because the chamber pressure is not great enough to make the base of the case stretch to meet the bolt face.
This is where making a workup load and starting at the suggested starting load and working up will be very informative. You will reach a point with new brass as the load increases that the primers are flush with the base of the case. And at this point the brass is stretching and does not spring back to it original length. And this varies between case brands, and the hardness and thickness in the base of the case.
Below these .308 cases were fired in a brand new Savage rifle with the die setup to make hard contact with the shell holder. And no information was give on how far the case shoulder where pushed back during sizing so this info is very ball park. But please note on the bottom chart it tells you at what firing the cases started to stretch.
Below is a example of excessive head clearance, meaning bumping the case shoulder back too far in a old worn British Enfield rifle at max military headspace. In my rifle there was .016 head clearance and the case separated on its 3rd firing when full length resized and the die making contract with the shell holder.
Below a properly fire formed case that is now headspacing on its shoulder and does not stretch with minimum shoulder bump.
Bottom line, In 1973 I bought a Remington 760 .270 Win pump action that I full length resize with the die making hard contact with the shell holder and never had a single case head separation. "BUT" had a case head separation with a .303 British Enfield rifle the 3rd time the case was full length resized. It is the amount of shoulder bump and the chamber pressure that makes the case stretch and fail. And with reduced loads and neck sizing only I got over 30 reloads with the same cases before the necks started cracking.
So again it is the amount the case shoulder is pushed back every time and higher chamber pressures that cause the case to stretch and fail. And your chamber and sizing die will have the greatest effect on case life and why minimum shoulder bump extends case life.
Bumping the shoulder back .001 to .002 below the red dotted line will prevent case stretching when full length resizing. And the further the shoulder is pushed back toward the green dotted line increases the chances the case will stretch and have a case head separation.