Widow maker 223
Well-known member
Originally Posted By: SfsmedicOriginally Posted By: CatShooterOriginally Posted By: SfsmedicOriginally Posted By: CatShooterOriginally Posted By: K_V_VHow much setback in headspace are you guys going for on your gas guns? I was planning on bumping the shoulder .001" but I also want them to cycle reliably. Not new to reloading, just new to reloading AR's. 223 Wylde chamber and standard rcbs dies btw.
Headspace will not affect feeding - but it can affect the final lock-up.
There is nothing about 0.004" that has any meaning.
Neck size until you have lock-up problems, and then move the headspace back 0.001" at a time until there is no lock-up drag. Then lock the die setting.
Let me clarify then. Get a hornady or Sinclair headspace gage so you can measure the fire formed brass. Use the fire formed brass as your chamber size and bump the shoulder back .004 from that chamber size.
If you don't bump it back enough it may fully close on your round but you will have one heck of a time manually opening the chamber. See the thread on mortaring your AR.
Let me clarify then.
A fired case does not give you the headspace - it may need several firings until it is "chamber length".
Only then, can you use it as a starting point - and if you size 0.004" shorter for each firing, you will have very short case life, cuz the cases will stretch 0.004" on each firing.
Five firings at 0.004" equal 0.020" stretch - very badd!
And Higgie, Dude... you know - I mean you KNOW - that you need to be using small base dies. Don'cha??
I disagree and an easy way to find out. Fire a few cases. Load them in the gun and then manually extract them. See if lock up isn't extremely tight.
I never said I bump back .004 each time. I said I bump .004 from chamber size. In my manual it says my chamber size for each gun and the desired shoulder measurement for that gun. That is how I achieve the measurement. If 8 loads on my 6.8 isn't a lot then I guess I'm happy. Because that's where I am and so far the brass is still fine.
My rifle has a 1.350 chamber size and I bump back to 1.346 which is where my Dillon tool head is now set up for that gun. I check it but never need to adjust. I am not measuring and readjusting every time. Because my chamber size doesn't change. I can check the brass on its 1st fire or 5th and it will be right at 1.350 after being fired from that gun.
Also five firings from 1.350 resized to 1.346 each time equals .004 each time it's not accumulated math. These are both bolt guns that get neck sized multiple times until the bolt is hard to operate than needs a .002 shoulder bump to start over. You have to bump them back or they will not get proper lock up and then the firing pin might just go tap instead of bang and you will be wrestling it trying to get it to come unlocked to load a different round.
The most common issue we see with ARs is people not bumping the shoulder back far enough on their resized brass and then wondering why they can't manually extract the unfired round.
This is addressed in Dave Brennan's book Precision Shooting: Reloading Guide and my technique I'm discussing is from his pages addressing shooting the AR
This is the tool I use to measure fired brass and determine chamber size. I measure several cases to determine initial length to test with on a new rifle. http://www.hornady.com/store/Headspace-Gauge-Kits/
So all chambers are cut to the exact same dimensions??
i should read more books.
Headspace will not affect feeding - but it can affect the final lock-up.
There is nothing about 0.004" that has any meaning.
Neck size until you have lock-up problems, and then move the headspace back 0.001" at a time until there is no lock-up drag. Then lock the die setting.
Let me clarify then. Get a hornady or Sinclair headspace gage so you can measure the fire formed brass. Use the fire formed brass as your chamber size and bump the shoulder back .004 from that chamber size.
If you don't bump it back enough it may fully close on your round but you will have one heck of a time manually opening the chamber. See the thread on mortaring your AR.
Let me clarify then.
A fired case does not give you the headspace - it may need several firings until it is "chamber length".
Only then, can you use it as a starting point - and if you size 0.004" shorter for each firing, you will have very short case life, cuz the cases will stretch 0.004" on each firing.
Five firings at 0.004" equal 0.020" stretch - very badd!
And Higgie, Dude... you know - I mean you KNOW - that you need to be using small base dies. Don'cha??
I disagree and an easy way to find out. Fire a few cases. Load them in the gun and then manually extract them. See if lock up isn't extremely tight.
I never said I bump back .004 each time. I said I bump .004 from chamber size. In my manual it says my chamber size for each gun and the desired shoulder measurement for that gun. That is how I achieve the measurement. If 8 loads on my 6.8 isn't a lot then I guess I'm happy. Because that's where I am and so far the brass is still fine.
My rifle has a 1.350 chamber size and I bump back to 1.346 which is where my Dillon tool head is now set up for that gun. I check it but never need to adjust. I am not measuring and readjusting every time. Because my chamber size doesn't change. I can check the brass on its 1st fire or 5th and it will be right at 1.350 after being fired from that gun.
Also five firings from 1.350 resized to 1.346 each time equals .004 each time it's not accumulated math. These are both bolt guns that get neck sized multiple times until the bolt is hard to operate than needs a .002 shoulder bump to start over. You have to bump them back or they will not get proper lock up and then the firing pin might just go tap instead of bang and you will be wrestling it trying to get it to come unlocked to load a different round.
The most common issue we see with ARs is people not bumping the shoulder back far enough on their resized brass and then wondering why they can't manually extract the unfired round.
This is addressed in Dave Brennan's book Precision Shooting: Reloading Guide and my technique I'm discussing is from his pages addressing shooting the AR
This is the tool I use to measure fired brass and determine chamber size. I measure several cases to determine initial length to test with on a new rifle. http://www.hornady.com/store/Headspace-Gauge-Kits/
So all chambers are cut to the exact same dimensions??