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Or you can measure immediately after firing to get a somewhat better idea compared to measuring cold brass........its important to have them all set back the same as uniformity is what youre after in the first place, so .002 to .004 is fine so long as they are all the same, just like trim to length and neck wall thickness......all the same.
I think we are saying the same thing from a different angle. Maybe not. Wouldn't the neck be sized at least partially by the sizing die if you're hitting the shoulder? But I guess you wouldn't get any shoulder bump with neck-sizing, if that is what you are after.I admit I don't fire enough bolt action (still working on 50 or so fired/necked cases) or super-mega-magnums having enough case stretch to bother. Most is either FL sized or neck-sized.
Quote from: Fl0und3rz on June 04, 2019, 12:20:14 PMI think we are saying the same thing from a different angle. Maybe not. Wouldn't the neck be sized at least partially by the sizing die if you're hitting the shoulder? But I guess you wouldn't get any shoulder bump with neck-sizing, if that is what you are after.I admit I don't fire enough bolt action (still working on 50 or so fired/necked cases) or super-mega-magnums having enough case stretch to bother. Most is either FL sized or neck-sized.If the die bumps the shoulder, the neck and the rest of the case are all fully sized. It is not possible to bump the shoulder with a full length die without fully sizing the neck. The .002" shoulder bump discussed here is correct full length sizing for your chamber; in many cases running the die all the way down to the shell holder is excessive sizing but is a one-size-fits-all approach for generic sizing die instructions. As Bullblaster said - case stretch is not just (or even mostly) the territory of bolt actions or magnums, in fact weaker actions like a 30/30 lever gun or most semi-autos benefit just as much or more. Pretty much all bottleneck cartridges benefit from correct sizing.