Bumped shoulders too far

Jimbee

WKR
Joined
Mar 16, 2020
Messages
1,273
I have a Tikka barrel reamed to 6-284. Long story short, when I necked down 6.5-284 brass I pushed the shoulders back .012ish. I ruined some lapua brass in this latest reloading learning experience. I had a case separate and there's a telltale shiny ring on most of the other fired pieces. I have some unfired Norma brass that I necked down and bumped shoulders too far. Can I salvage it by jamming a bullet into the lands, or do I need to start over with new?
 
Jam it or make a false shoulder to headspace off.

For a false shoulder, you’d need to neck up the brass (.264 might work, but .277 would be better), then neck back down to 6mm.

When necking back down, do it in small increments until you can chamber the brass with a decent amount of resistance.

Here’s an example with my 6.5 Sherman
IMG_4055.jpeg
 
You could anneal the brass and then use a light load to fire form the case.

If it were me, I would trash the brass and start over with new cases. Lessons learned.
 
The brass is already overworked, necking it up and back down for a false shoulder is just working it more. Jam and blast or throw it away.

Overworked because the unfired brass was sized once? Pretty simple to anneal if that’s the concern.

But also pretty simple to just trash it and start over with new brass.
 
To answer your question. I’ve been reloading for 20+ years, and frankly imo it’s not worth it to try to “salvage” brass you have inadvertently damaged. I didn’t see you mention how many were damaged - so I’m not sure if we’re talking about 10 or 100 brass or something in between, but I would just pitch them and start again. #1 case head separation just sucks (been there done that). #2 even with annealing etc the damage mid body of the case from overworking won’t be “fixed”. #3. Will they ever be consistent with your other new properly worked brass? #4. You may always have a nagging worry about those brass which again imo I’d just rather not have.

Good luck!
 
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