Choupique
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2022
- Messages
- 576
I am reloading .338 win mag norma brass. I have been neck sizing up to this point. After 3 firings, it was tight to chamber it so I decided I'd figure out this whole shoulder bump thing. I made myself a little comparator out of a 10mm socket, measured one that was tight, put a FL die in and screwed it down till it was tight on the case, sized it, tried it, screwed it in a little more, size it, tried it. I ended up with the die all the way against the shell holder, basically how the instructions recommend setting it before it chambered like new. According to my crude comparator I'm getting 0.002-0.004" of shoulder bump this way. Sounds like I just magically got the right combination of stuff for it to work out that way?
I had read and been told that sizing brass this way dramatically overworks it and results in exceptionally short case life and risk of case head separation with belted magnums. According to my comparator and rifle, it's what it takes to get it chambering like I want it to. Am I about to start blowing case heads this way? How do you even properly check if you're in danger of splitting a case head?
I had read and been told that sizing brass this way dramatically overworks it and results in exceptionally short case life and risk of case head separation with belted magnums. According to my comparator and rifle, it's what it takes to get it chambering like I want it to. Am I about to start blowing case heads this way? How do you even properly check if you're in danger of splitting a case head?