dellet
Gold $$ Contributor
I don't think a short neck ever killed anyone or blew anyone up.Possibly or turned out to be a turd.
This step I'm just curious about trim lengths. Working with gunsmith on load development. Also have been given some suggestions from Accurate and Hodgdon on powders to start with.
We're taking slow steps. Last thing we wanna do is blow up this expensive venture. That would suck.
Too long of neck has certainly caused some problems.
No one can advise you of a safe margin of length needed for the neck to stretch when firing. Unless they know how tight the neck is and an idea of operating pressures. Sounds like in this instance that would only be your gunsmith and the guy who made the reamer.
As an example, I had a reamer made that the only change was to tighten the neck diameter .003". I had to shorten the neck .005" from the original case length to get a clean release of the bullet.
Starting short and carefully allowing longer lengths would not be a bad idea. If you truly are doing something "no one has ever tried" a larger margin of error would be my way of doing it.