I'm having a heck of a time getting a quantifiable answer on this so any help would be appreciated.
Most people recommend bumping the shoulder back about .002" or .003" after firing in order to prolong the life of the brass and prevent casehead separation. That is fine and not what my question is.
I have a new .300 Norma Magnum barrel chambered by Short Action Customs. The brass I am using is Peterson. Using my shoulder bump gauge, the unfired Peterson brass measured between 2.022 and 2.032 with the vast majority being around 2.026 prior to firing. After firing, they are all at 2.042 +/- .001
From here I can obviously bump the shoulders back .002 after each firing.
My questions are:
1. Will this initial .016 to .020 headspace difference significantly decrease the life of my brass and lead to casehead separation sooner than later?
2. What is a normal amount of headspace stretch for virgin brass to have to stretch within a match chamber?
FWIW, this is not my first precision rifle and I have been reloading for about 10 years. This is just the first brass/chamber combination I have had that has given me concerns. I have read multiple threads on multiple forums about headspace but they all address excessively bumping the shoulder back after firing instead of the shoulder excessively moving during initial firing.
Most people recommend bumping the shoulder back about .002" or .003" after firing in order to prolong the life of the brass and prevent casehead separation. That is fine and not what my question is.
I have a new .300 Norma Magnum barrel chambered by Short Action Customs. The brass I am using is Peterson. Using my shoulder bump gauge, the unfired Peterson brass measured between 2.022 and 2.032 with the vast majority being around 2.026 prior to firing. After firing, they are all at 2.042 +/- .001
From here I can obviously bump the shoulders back .002 after each firing.
My questions are:
1. Will this initial .016 to .020 headspace difference significantly decrease the life of my brass and lead to casehead separation sooner than later?
2. What is a normal amount of headspace stretch for virgin brass to have to stretch within a match chamber?
FWIW, this is not my first precision rifle and I have been reloading for about 10 years. This is just the first brass/chamber combination I have had that has given me concerns. I have read multiple threads on multiple forums about headspace but they all address excessively bumping the shoulder back after firing instead of the shoulder excessively moving during initial firing.