I understand that you want the chamber to close on the go, and not close on the no-go.. but, wondering if there are intricacies in there to help possibly improve accuracy?
What I'd like to know is.. will it help to have the bolt barely close on a go gauge so as to minimize case expansion? I know that after you shoot the brass the first time you just bump it back a few thou.. but taking the .223 for example, the go at PTG is 1.464" and no-go is 1.467". So if I go all the way in till it won't close on the go, and then back it out till it barely closes, I'd think I have the tightest chamber possible? Am I thinking clearly? This moon phase gets me...
What I'd like to know is.. will it help to have the bolt barely close on a go gauge so as to minimize case expansion? I know that after you shoot the brass the first time you just bump it back a few thou.. but taking the .223 for example, the go at PTG is 1.464" and no-go is 1.467". So if I go all the way in till it won't close on the go, and then back it out till it barely closes, I'd think I have the tightest chamber possible? Am I thinking clearly? This moon phase gets me...