Beginning with my next load, I will bump the shoulder back on my brass. Until now, I have neck sized my brass. I will be using a Lee collet neck size die to size the neck and a Redding body size die to bump the shoulder. I will be using a digital caliper and Sinclair comparator body and bump gage insert to measure the amount of bump.
I measured 30 fired (from .308 FN SPR) deprimed cases at the shoulder to identify the length from which I would bump the shoulders .001 - .002". The shoulder measurements ranged from 1.544" to 1.561". This raises 2 questions:
1. Why such a wide range (.017") in measurements? I keep detailed records and measurements of just about everything, EXCEPT the number of times a case has been fired. 18 of the 30 cases have shoulder measurements between 1.556" and 1.561". Could it be that these cases have been fired more frequently than the others, so the shoulder has moved further forward?
2. Do I bump the shoulder from the longest shoulder measurement, in this case from 1.561", since I know that brass at that shoulder length will chamber?
Any insight/advice will be greatly appreciated.
Bob
I measured 30 fired (from .308 FN SPR) deprimed cases at the shoulder to identify the length from which I would bump the shoulders .001 - .002". The shoulder measurements ranged from 1.544" to 1.561". This raises 2 questions:
1. Why such a wide range (.017") in measurements? I keep detailed records and measurements of just about everything, EXCEPT the number of times a case has been fired. 18 of the 30 cases have shoulder measurements between 1.556" and 1.561". Could it be that these cases have been fired more frequently than the others, so the shoulder has moved further forward?
2. Do I bump the shoulder from the longest shoulder measurement, in this case from 1.561", since I know that brass at that shoulder length will chamber?
Any insight/advice will be greatly appreciated.
Bob