Now thats shooting! i wish my groups looked like that. i sized some brass with the new die and am not bumping the shoulder back on some and some it gets moved less than .001" , it all chambers great not like virgin brass but not as hard as some that has been neck sized to 2x. heres the kicker outta 10 peices i have one that the shoulder didnt move at all and is still trimed length but is really hard to chamber. i measured . 2" up from the base and it reads .460" and fired is almolst .461". There stretching .002" in o.a.l after sizing is this acceptable and whats with the one that wont chamber?
You might find this helpful:
http://www.accurateshooter.com/technical-articles/die-issues-when-bumping-shoulders/
The bottom line is that if you run max safe pressure loads (and why wouldn't you, if they give great accuracy?), you need a full-length sizing die that matches your chamber, resizing (in the 0.0005"-0.002" range, depending on your preference) the neck, shoulder, and base. A factory full-length die will resize the case to fit in a SAAMI minimum chamber with room to spare, but will overwork your brass, leading to short case life and so-so accuracy unless your chamber is at the SAAMI minimum (not likely). It's pretty clear that the FL dies you have don't match your chamber.
This is why shooters who really care about accuracy and long case life use tough brass with uniform dimensions (e.g., Lapua), spec their chambering reamers to match the brass, and spec their resizing dies to be compatible with the reamer dimensions. [You can also work backwards, buying a factory FL die and having a chambering reamer made to be compatible with that.]
For the PPC and BR/Dasher family of cartridges using Lapua brass, all of this has been standardized to the extent that a benchrest gunsmith can supply you with a chamber that works with the brass, and the Harrells can supply you with a $75 full-length bushing die that is fit to the fired/tight brass that you send them. Problem solved.
With a factory rifle/chamber you may be able to find a factory die that works, or use some combination of dies (neck die, body die, ring/base die) to get the job done that one properly-fitting full-length die should be able to do. But there are no guarantees, and the process is painful compared to the PPC/BR/Dasher alternative.