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So I got to thinking last night about the 7mm. When I finished off the original 20 rounds the previous owner worked up I never had a tight bolt lift after firing those rounds. Since I never checked them with a case gauge just set up the die and went. Is it possible that I never set the die up correct and im creating a headspace issue which is causing the tight bolt and not the powder charge ?
If they were incorrectly sized you would possibly have issues closing the bolt. You have issues opening the bolt due to over pressure.Those cases plump when they cook. If you over pressure them they get tight.Reduce the charge and work up slowly.Good Luck.
He probably used new brass? or sized/trimmed correctly. Yes, you will find signs of overpressure much sooner in a cartridge that hasn't been sized correctly even with a lower powder charge. For instance, you could use new brass that is within tolerance and have no signs of over pressure then use the same powder charge in a cartridge with a case that is incorrectly sized/trimmed and have signs of over pressure. You need to size/trim and then work up a load. Quote from: huntandjeep on August 31, 2015, 05:33:48 PMSo I got to thinking last night about the 7mm. When I finished off the original 20 rounds the previous owner worked up I never had a tight bolt lift after firing those rounds. Since I never checked them with a case gauge just set up the die and went. Is it possible that I never set the die up correct and im creating a headspace issue which is causing the tight bolt and not the powder charge ?
Should I just be bump sizing then? I understand full length sizing returns them to Saami spec ,but I don't need to do that every time correct. Just when using new brass before there fired in my chamber. These will never go in somebody else's rifle
It's the datum of the shoulder causing the firm bolt not the neck lenght most likely.