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Okay, I'm gonna make a guess or three.Is there. Point here it starts to affect accuracy? I have a new .308 barrel and all my brass Is .05 to .07 from the fired dimension of the cases I just fired I normally set back .015 to .02 …..
Yes to allOkay, I'm gonna make a guess or three.
You had a 308 barrel and now you have a new 308 barrel.
You fired brass in the old barrel and now you want to use that brass in the new barrel?
But, this is tricky, your used brass is .005-.007 shorter than what brass fired in the new barrel gives you at the datum?
Answer these questions and maybe we can all get together on what the true question is.
This I think sums up my problem..You most likely had what gunsmiths refer to as a zero headspace on the original barrel and the new one may be right on the edge of closing on a No-Go gauge. I have a fantastic shooting 308 barrel on my AIAW that is very similar to your numbers. The big concern initially would not be affects on accuracy but more to the fact the old brass is gonna stretch quite a bit. Maybe not even all the way to the new length in one firing.
Have you already FL sized the "short" brass? If not, back the FL die off a turn, setting the die up to only size down on the body. That should push the shoulder out some and lessen the stretching.
Watch for incipient case separations! That shiny ring around the case near the head means trouble.
Also, do you have some virgin 308 brass around? See how the new compares to the old.