I somewhat disagree because go-no-go gauges just do what the name implies, without providing a measurement of chamber headspace. I believe that the scotch tape test does provide an indication of sufficient headspace for safe firing in my case, because I had easy bolt drop/lift with factory ammo, and a stiff bolt with 2 layers scotch tape (0.003" added). I had consistent results with trying the test 10 or so times with three different Federal cases from different ammo batches. This is the same method many competition shooters use to determine shoulder bump for resizing cases....So measuring a factory round at the datum line and adding a piece of scotch tape won't give you an accurate enough measurement to tell you if the chamber is in spec or not. You need to use a gauge to be sure.
It's combination of shoulder deformation (rounding) and bump by over 0.002" (0.007" measured with comparator) because I'm turning the die about 1/8-1/6" extra turn beyond where 0.002" bump should be. 1/6-1/8" turn on a 14 TPI die is about 0.012-0.009", so the die is definitely doing more resizing than optimal. But consider that it is the resizing with the die and not the chamber that is causing the shoulder deformation, so scoping the chamber is unlikely to show a funny-shaped chamber, especially given that this is a Tikka factory barrel. But a true headspace measurement by a Gunsmith could be helpful in determining whether I need a different thickness shellholder.The only thing I can think of with the shoulder issue is that if it is in fact changing the shape, that is changing the contact point of the bullet insert, and therefore the perceived measurement. You may not be actually bumping the shoulders back .007". I'm perplexed as to why the shoulders are changing shape though, might be worth having a gunsmith gauge and scope it.
I think my options now after getting similar shoulder bump issues with Lee, LE Wilson, and Hornady dies are to try a shellholder with different thickness (more or less?) and different brass.