dellet
Gold $$ Contributor
How does that work out when the chamber does not match the gauge?flush with the top step and above the low step it does.
This is the elephant in the room being ignored. Gauges are a fit, no fit device. They don’t tell why something does not fit. You have to measure.
What happens when your brass is at max trim length and your shoulder is pushed back .030”?
Drop it in your gauge and it sits at the low step because it’s now head spacing off the neck.
In the OP’s example the case is possibly too long for the chamber in one of three places. The neck, the shoulder or body. Without an actual measurement of both chamber and sized case, it’s a mystery. All we know is that if you cut a little bit off the case head, the bolt closes easier. That really doesn’t even tell you that the problem is not diameter.
The only clue we have is that he stated putting marking die on the shoulder and base, left marks on both. If you have marks on top and bottom, and the bolt won’t close, it’s too long. You can take it off the top or bottom to make it fit. Either way the distance between base and shoulder changes. One just might make more sense than the other. One is a work around, the other actually solves the problem.
What this sounds like is a poor sizing die, chamber match. It could be as simple as a shell holder out of spec. But this is why actual measurements are needed. How often are there post of “I ran my die down all the way to the shell holder, and the brass won’t chamber”? It’s just not uncommon. What is uncommon is suggesting cutting the case head down to fit. This is a first for me to read.
Truing the case head to the body is a completely different discussion.
If the OP would simply measure the base of the case head to the .400 diameter of case that does not fit, the answer would likely be revealed.
No body cares if a headspace gauge fits the chamber, or if the sized case fits the chamber gauge. When the brass won’t fit the chamber, when both those pass, what the gauges are telling you is very simple, “get a measuring tool, a spec sheet, compare and solve the problem.