I'm trying to track down what is going on with some irregularity in my resizing process.
I have a bullet central sizing die for my 300 Norma, I'm using a redding t7, I set my die up to the headspace I'm looking for (until my bolt closes freely with the sized brass, about 3 thousandths), lock it down, use Hornady case lube, and sized 100 pieces of brass. 90 of those pieces are within a half thousandth to a thou of each other, but 10 pieces were three thousandths shorter than the shortest of the rest of them. Those 10 pieces are around 6-8 thousandths shorter than fired brass.
Is there anything obvious that I should be looking for causing this? I generally like to test the first few pieces and then just keep moving with my process, but this is giving me trust issues lol.
Also, if you ever end up with sized brass smaller than your normal batch size, do you just use it as a fouler or do you send them? I don't think that an extra 3 thou will make this giant difference, but, it is an inconsistentcy that I feel like I can control.
I have a bullet central sizing die for my 300 Norma, I'm using a redding t7, I set my die up to the headspace I'm looking for (until my bolt closes freely with the sized brass, about 3 thousandths), lock it down, use Hornady case lube, and sized 100 pieces of brass. 90 of those pieces are within a half thousandth to a thou of each other, but 10 pieces were three thousandths shorter than the shortest of the rest of them. Those 10 pieces are around 6-8 thousandths shorter than fired brass.
Is there anything obvious that I should be looking for causing this? I generally like to test the first few pieces and then just keep moving with my process, but this is giving me trust issues lol.
Also, if you ever end up with sized brass smaller than your normal batch size, do you just use it as a fouler or do you send them? I don't think that an extra 3 thou will make this giant difference, but, it is an inconsistentcy that I feel like I can control.