I have two sets of Lapua 6BR brass which is once fired. I loaded up some rounds (which would be second firing on the brass) and found that when I tried to chamber them the bolt would stop just short of closed.
I inspected the rounds and could see no obvious issues, and I found that if I lightly tapped the bolt forward I could then close it. I shot the ammo like this (it was annoying but shot great with the normal level of accuracy.
I figured I had messed up on headspace and hadn't bumped the shoulders back enough (I measured the original fired cases and bumped them back two thousandths). I use custom Whidden dies (this was my first time using them).
When I got home I looked over the fired brass and took some measurements, I also picked up a Whidden BR case gauge which has measurements and Go / No Go markings. I found that I had bumped the shoulder back but I was still ~ 0.001" shy of the GO length (easy fix, I tried to chamber some prepped brass (no bullet) and it was slightly tight but barely noticeable.
I also noticed that the prepped cases had some peening and I started to wonder if that was a factor. The extra force it took to load a prepped case was definitely less than it took me to load the loaded rounds so I got to thinking if the raised lip on the peened area was what was causing the issue (bullet would expand that area when seated which would explain the extra force required to seat between a loaded case and an unloaded case). To be clear the bullets are not in the lands (measured / confirmed as 0.075" jump).
I used a wet tumbler to clean them with no stainless steel pins. Even without the pins there is still peening on the mouthes (can feel a lip with my finger nail). I will reduce the time from here forward to see if that helps.
I still feel that headspace was the issue but how are others dealing with peening? I have a Giraud and could chamfer it off but I dont want to do this every time (even removing a very minimal amount of material is bound to add up over time.
I inspected the rounds and could see no obvious issues, and I found that if I lightly tapped the bolt forward I could then close it. I shot the ammo like this (it was annoying but shot great with the normal level of accuracy.
I figured I had messed up on headspace and hadn't bumped the shoulders back enough (I measured the original fired cases and bumped them back two thousandths). I use custom Whidden dies (this was my first time using them).
When I got home I looked over the fired brass and took some measurements, I also picked up a Whidden BR case gauge which has measurements and Go / No Go markings. I found that I had bumped the shoulder back but I was still ~ 0.001" shy of the GO length (easy fix, I tried to chamber some prepped brass (no bullet) and it was slightly tight but barely noticeable.
I also noticed that the prepped cases had some peening and I started to wonder if that was a factor. The extra force it took to load a prepped case was definitely less than it took me to load the loaded rounds so I got to thinking if the raised lip on the peened area was what was causing the issue (bullet would expand that area when seated which would explain the extra force required to seat between a loaded case and an unloaded case). To be clear the bullets are not in the lands (measured / confirmed as 0.075" jump).
I used a wet tumbler to clean them with no stainless steel pins. Even without the pins there is still peening on the mouthes (can feel a lip with my finger nail). I will reduce the time from here forward to see if that helps.
I still feel that headspace was the issue but how are others dealing with peening? I have a Giraud and could chamfer it off but I dont want to do this every time (even removing a very minimal amount of material is bound to add up over time.