I was reading JP's website on their 6mm CM barrels and they give a technique for "soft seating" bullets to headspace off the bullet rather than the shoulder for min or under min spec new cases.
So my question is not necessarily related to just the 6mm Creedmore but to all similar situations with new brass that is at or under min headspace spec. How exactly do you "soft seat"? Is this just another way to say jam the bullet into the lands? Or is there something more involved. I'm asking because I have a similar situation with some .260 Rem Virgin PRIME headstamped brass that is waaay under my match chamber HS specs. Like 10-12 thousandths under. The couple times I shot them as Virgin brass at my regular "warmish" loads seemed to really trash the primer pockets in 1-2 firings. Short of loading up some really weak loads to fire form them to the chamber, is this technique above worth trying and if so, how exactly do you do it?
TIA.
6mm Creedmoor Cartridge Compatibility
From our hand-loading experience, most 6.5 Creedmoor cases can be resized to 6mm Creedmoor and work without issue. As a general rule, it is important to run the head space set back of the shoulder on the resized cases close to maximum while still allowing for a "drop fit" in the chamber on a self-loader. If you purchase new brass, gauge to see where it falls on the headspace spectrum.
If you have new cases that are at minimum spec. or below on a headspace gauge, you can use the Hornady 105gr. BTHP loaded to 2.740" or a bit longer to give a soft seat and force the case head to the bolt face. In other words, you will head space off the bullet, not the shoulder. This will allow the case to fire form and set the shoulder forward on the first fire. This minimizes case stretch in front of the web that could result in a premature case failure. https://www.jprifles.com/buy.php?item=JPSM6C-22M8XL9
So my question is not necessarily related to just the 6mm Creedmore but to all similar situations with new brass that is at or under min headspace spec. How exactly do you "soft seat"? Is this just another way to say jam the bullet into the lands? Or is there something more involved. I'm asking because I have a similar situation with some .260 Rem Virgin PRIME headstamped brass that is waaay under my match chamber HS specs. Like 10-12 thousandths under. The couple times I shot them as Virgin brass at my regular "warmish" loads seemed to really trash the primer pockets in 1-2 firings. Short of loading up some really weak loads to fire form them to the chamber, is this technique above worth trying and if so, how exactly do you do it?
TIA.