I am new to reloading, shoot an AR15 in 223 Remington, and have a question regarding shoulder setback and the Redding full length sizing die bottoming out on my Forster C-Ax press shellholder jaws.
Using some Sinclair tools, the average length of fired cases is 1.277". The actual measurement is not relevant...it is odd because of the attachments on the measuring calipers. I carefully adjusted the die downwards a bit at a time, measuring the case until it measured 1.274", so as to give about .003" clearance between the shoulder and the chamber.
I found that to achieve the 1.274" dimension the die was bottomed out on the press shell holder jaws. It would not be possible to push the shoulder back any more since you can not screw the die down any further. This seems very odd to me. What if the rifle had fired shells that were 1.273"? Trying to set the shoulder back to 1.270" (.003" clearance), would be impossible.
All this seems to indicate a very tight chamber, and perhaps it is. It is a Krieger barrel chambered in 223 Remington, not 5.56.
Please educate me on what I may be missing here.
Using some Sinclair tools, the average length of fired cases is 1.277". The actual measurement is not relevant...it is odd because of the attachments on the measuring calipers. I carefully adjusted the die downwards a bit at a time, measuring the case until it measured 1.274", so as to give about .003" clearance between the shoulder and the chamber.
I found that to achieve the 1.274" dimension the die was bottomed out on the press shell holder jaws. It would not be possible to push the shoulder back any more since you can not screw the die down any further. This seems very odd to me. What if the rifle had fired shells that were 1.273"? Trying to set the shoulder back to 1.270" (.003" clearance), would be impossible.
All this seems to indicate a very tight chamber, and perhaps it is. It is a Krieger barrel chambered in 223 Remington, not 5.56.
Please educate me on what I may be missing here.