Bolt doesn't close

jdubrr

Private
Minuteman
Mar 23, 2019
39
7
After I resize my brass I put in into my rifle and the bolt closes, but after I load a bullet into the same brass the bolt no longer closes.
Rifle is a Remmy 700 6.5CM
Berger 130gr
Hornady Brass
2.1790 to the ogive
brass is trimmed to 1.910

bolt does close with some loaded rounds but doesn't with others

I've shot this load plenty in the past, but all of a sudden I am facing this issue

I tried turning down my sizing die to bump the shoulder more but same issue.

Anyone have ideas on what's going on?
 
Pretty rare for all brass to be the same length without above average equipment. Same for OGIVE. Did you check to see if the ones that don't close are different or not? Color them with marker then find out where the marker rubs off.

Does it close with sized, unloaded brass?
 
Pretty rare for all brass to be the same length without above average equipment. Same for OGIVE. Did you check to see if the ones that don't close are different or not? Color them with marker then find out where the marker rubs off.

Does it close with sized, unloaded brass?
All brass are Hornady

It does close with all sized unloaded brass, when loaded some close and some do not
 
Check with calipers to ensure the case is actually within max length. Is your FL sizer die just touching the shell holder or did you give it an extra 1/8 of a turn to set the shoulder back? Sometimes that's the issue. How many times has the brass been reloaded?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Mainer
If the OGIVE and case OAL are the same, and headspace is the same (or more open per your bumping some further) then they would all chamber the same. They are not the same.

what ^ he said. The chamber size is the constant in this equation. Something is off with brass, seating depth, etc.
 
Check with calipers to ensure the case is actually within max length. Is your FL sizer die just touching the shell holder or did you give it an extra 1/8 of a turn to set the shoulder back? Sometimes that's the issue. How many times has the brass been reloaded?
I've been measuring everything multiple times. The die was almost touching the shell plate then I turned it down a 1/4 turn at a time, same outcome, now it's turned down about 1 full turn and the press is camming over, same result.
 
already did that
you stated you just had the gun built. So I'm assuming its a new chamber that's never been fired? If so, clean the chamber and bore just in case there is metal left over from the chamber reamer. I also had a bad chamber reamer that was used to cut a new chamber and I couldn't put in any rounds that wasn't new brass, had to rent another reamer to fix the issue. Ask your gunsmith then. Good luck.
 
If the rounds are all the same dimensions, they will all fit the chamber the same. You are missing a dimensional difference somewhere.
 
you stated you just had the gun built. So I'm assuming its a new chamber that's never been fired? If so, clean the chamber and bore just in case there is metal left over from the chamber reamer. I also had a bad chamber reamer that was used to cut a new chamber and I couldn't put in any rounds that wasn't new brass, had to rent another reamer to fix the issue. Ask your gunsmith then. Good luck.
it's been shot a bunch already.
 
Brand dependent; If you set your seating die incorrectly, it can make slight contact with the shoulder on some rounds. A tiny amount of contact is almost undetectable and will stop the bolt from closing, even caming closed
 
  • Like
Reactions: Average guy
See above - btw most bullets seated to shallow or into the rifling will cam shut under pressure..

if it doesn’t do that most likely your talking a brass issue. See my post above - pull the bullet out of a round that does not work.. then try to close the bolt - I bet it still does NOT work.

you have the classic symptoms of a deformed shoulder.
 
Brand dependent; If you set your seating die incorrectly, it can make slight contact with the shoulder on some rounds. A tiny amount of contact is almost undetectable and will stop the bolt from closing, even caming closed
I've used this same die to seat hundreds of rounds already. Could something have changed?
 
See above - btw most bullets seated to shallow or into the rifling will cam shut under pressure..

if it doesn’t do that most likely your talking a brass issue. See my post above - pull the bullet out of a round that does not work.. then try to close the bolt - I bet it still does NOT work.

you have the classic symptoms of a deformed shoulder.
I actually put the resized brass into the rifle without a bullet and the bolt closes, then i seated a bullet into the same case now the bolt doesn't close.
 
If all your cases fit after sizing but before the bullet it would seem you narrowed it down to the bullet.

Do you have a nice set of calipers?

Are you right at the lands? What is your OACL?

Have you done a thorough cleaning?
 
See above - btw most bullets seated to shallow or into the rifling will cam shut under pressure..

if it doesn’t do that most likely your talking a brass issue. See my post above - pull the bullet out of a round that does not work.. then try to close the bolt - I bet it still does NOT work.

you have the classic symptoms of a deformed shoulder.
I agree with this gent, it was going to be my next reply. You'll can probably feel a slight bump at the shoulder.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Diver160651
If all your cases fit after sizing but before the bullet it would seem you narrowed it down to the bullet.

Do you have a nice set of calipers?

Are you right at the lands? What is your OACL?

Have you done a thorough cleaning?
Guys- it is the seating process- stop measuring and take the bullet out of a loaded round that does not work - the same brass still will not chamber.

your steating die is set to low - not the ogive adjustment, but the die body.

what seater are you using? Hornady?
 
If all your cases fit after sizing but before the bullet it would seem you narrowed it down to the bullet.

Do you have a nice set of calipers?

Are you right at the lands? What is your OACL?

Have you done a thorough cleaning?

Or because of neck thickness, seating the bullet expands the neck too much.
 
Guys- it is the seating process- stop measuring and take the bullet out of a loaded round that does not work - the same brass still will not chamber.

your steating die is set to low - not the ogive adjustment, but the die body.

what seater are you using? Hornady?

This.

Seating die is likely too low. It’s causing a lip to form at the end of brass and not allowing the round to chamber.

Bet if you pulled the barrel off and drop the round in, it would be sticking out the chamber about as far as the length of the neck.
 
  • Like
Reactions: supercorndogs
Here is an example of what happens when seating die is too low:

48486B32-E633-4A75-B34B-1896193B42AF.jpeg
 
  • Like
Reactions: Diver160651
One more item you can check, make sure your seater die is set correctly. The only resistance you should feel is the bullet being seated. If the seater die is set too far down it can also crush the shoulder.
 
Which bullet are you using? If your chamber has a tight freebore and the bullet diameter is a little over it could make the bullet stick.

A little carbon build up in this area and a good diameter bullet could have the same issue.
 
I suspect it is your case neck thickness. Measure the tip of the case mouth with calipers for a case that didn’t load. Tell us what you get. You probably have a tight neck chamber. The case mouth might have flared a little too.
 
I’m with the seating die on this one. Bet you it’s set too deep and your buckling the shoulder slightly, just enough to create a bugle and not allowing the round to chamber.