Pushing the bullet past the shoulder / neck junction

swhiteh3

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Aug 19, 2013
267
68
North of Charlotte, NC
Of course, we're talking about the full diameter section of the bullet.....

What is downside to a load which requires the bullet to be past the shoulder / neck junction?

I've heard lots of people say it's bad to push the bullet past this, but why? Anyone have data or really clear experiences why this is bad?

I have plenty of length available in my magazine, but just wondering if I should push the throat out a bit, and load the cartridges a bit longer to clear the neck / shoulder junction.

(For background, this is 6mm GT with a 115 DTAC. It was chambered with 0.170" freebore. After COAL / Jump testing it's happiest at 2.550", a jump of 0.042". And it's currently being pushed past the shoulder / neck junction by *ABOUT* 0.040", so I was assuming I'd add about 0.060" of freebore.)
 
After a few firings the shoulder material migrates forward into the neck. If the shoulder is thick enough you end up with a donut of thicker material at the base of the neck. That can pinch the bullet a bit more than the rest of the neck would.
That said I dont care if the bullets down past the neck, some of my best shooting combos are way into the case.
 
  • Like
Reactions: swhiteh3 and orkan
After a few firings the shoulder material migrates forward into the neck. If the shoulder is thick enough you end up with a donut of thicker material at the base of the neck. That can pinch the bullet a bit more than the rest of the neck would.
That said I dont care if the bullets down past the neck, some of my best shooting combos are way into the case.
If the firings get up past a dozen or so, it can start to be a real issue in some cartridges with certain dies.