Are you using the brass from your last barrel in the new barrel you just put on your bolt gun?
I have heard from a couple of people that a new barrel should have new brass. While this may be the perfect world answer I wonder how reasonable this is. I have brass with 8-9 firing on it that seems to be in good condition overall and it seems a shame to retire it when I spin the new barrel on.
On my first barrel change I was going from a factory chamber to an aftermarket barrel and chamber, the brass from the factory barrel was too tight in the aftermarket chamber after resizing and gave me all of the normal issues. I later resized that brass with a better die and it would have worked but I had already purchased new brass and didn't look back. I learned a lot about matching your die to your chamber during that mess.
Now I'm changing barrels again going from an aftermarket to another aftermarket barrel, not the same reamer and would like to continue to run the same brass.
I have heard from a couple of people that a new barrel should have new brass. While this may be the perfect world answer I wonder how reasonable this is. I have brass with 8-9 firing on it that seems to be in good condition overall and it seems a shame to retire it when I spin the new barrel on.
On my first barrel change I was going from a factory chamber to an aftermarket barrel and chamber, the brass from the factory barrel was too tight in the aftermarket chamber after resizing and gave me all of the normal issues. I later resized that brass with a better die and it would have worked but I had already purchased new brass and didn't look back. I learned a lot about matching your die to your chamber during that mess.
Now I'm changing barrels again going from an aftermarket to another aftermarket barrel, not the same reamer and would like to continue to run the same brass.