I bought the 223 Gold sizing die. I was so pleased with it that I ordered the 308 Win. Gold F/L die. when I received the 308 die, there were a couple of issues with it.
First issue was I couldn't get the die to bump the shoulders on thicker brass; Federal GMM and Military brass down to SAAMI min. (1.630"). Even with a shell holder that is shaved down .005".
I spoke to Wayne and he suggested I send the die back to be skimmed. I measured the length of the die before sending it back.
when I received the die back, it was skimmed .008".
The die now works fine, it gets the shoulders back to minimum with thick brass.
The second issue popped up when I sized some of my older Winchester brass that weighs under 165 grains and has thin necks. The necks will not get sized down enough to hold a bullet.
I did some testing with some Hornady brass that is also in the under 165 weight class. Same thing, the necks don't get sized enough to hold a bullet.
I took some of my thicker brass, Federal GMM, Remington and Military brass. The die sized the necks perfectly.
This older Winchester and Hornady brass I have is from lots made in the early 2000's. Current lots are thicker and weigh in the 170+ class.
I have Redding bushing dies and it seems that brass that have necks from the .331"-.333" bushing size won't get sized down enough in the M/A die. Not a big deal, since I can run cases through my Lee Collet die or use a .331" or .333" bushing and neck size the cases.
I was surprised since all of the regular factory F/L dies for 308 Win. that I've used over the years would size any unaltered factory brass.
The 223 gold die sized all of the various 223 Mfg. case necks I have.
I'll keep the 308 die as is since I can deal with the older brass as needed.
I did some runout measurements with both dies and the runout is low.
They are very nice dies.
That is what happens when you want your cake and eat it too. Standard full length dies will either size too much, just enough, or not enough...and never all three at the same time. Depending on the brass, press, and shell holder you will be in one of the three categories. This is why bushing dies exist in the first place. The reality is that if you want perfect sizing to a specific dimension you have to either find the right brass for that die, the right die for that chamber, or the right chamber for that brass and die. It sounds convoluted, I know. Welcome to owning every die set on the market.