Of course cases expand all over. You’ve missed my entire point. I’m not saying that the shoulder will not expand when fired or be bumped in sizing. What I’m saying is that the base of the case starts getting resized long before the shoulder gets bumped down. Headspace usually gets LARGER before it’s bumped back down when you resize it, especially with a gas gun. This is why brass gets longer and has to be trimmed. So as you’re screwing the die in and getting it set up you’re probably not bumping the shoulder much if at all at first depending on where you start; especially if it’s a new press/die/caliber as in this case. It’s not until the last bit that the shoulder is bumped. Sure it’s good to measure it, but it’s not nearly the cardinal sin that is being portrayed not to measure it.“From my experience loading for gas guns… and just from using reasoning, if a case drops into the chamber and obviously sticks before the shoulder bottoms out, the base of the case is expanded. Turning the die further in is not necessarily bumping the shoulder more and more if the base of the case is being sized before the shoulder ever contacts the die. Either way, the OP got his cases to fit in his chamber.”
Using your own reasoning, when a case expands during extraction it is going to expand in every direction, including shoulder length. Therefore the die will contact the shoulder and will size the shoulder more and more as you screw in the die.
So yes, when the op cammed over his shoulder probably bumped a few .001. But I’d be willing to bet the die worked as it was designed and it squeezed the expanded base up the body of the case bringing the diameter back into spec, increased the shoulder length, then once the base was small enough to allow the case deep enough into the die the shoulder was bumped back down. The die doesn’t just squish the shoulder down the whole time you’re running the ram. Some claim that these threads “are always solved by more shoulder bump” as if the shoulder is somehow bumped independent of the base being sized and physics occurring.
Either way, telling someone who turned a die in until the case would fit that they’re being unsafe or doing something wrong is just not accurate. Calling them ignorant while ranting like a 12 year old and then attacking me for telling him to screw his die in more is comical and sounds exactly like a guy who just learned how to measure shoulder bump but doesn’t understand it. That is not directed at you but the childish rant is what started this absurd, circular debate. People who feel the need to come on here and put ppl down for asking questions clearly have identity/self worth issues.
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