I recently got a Hornady headspace gauge kit and was measuring some 6mm brass based on the Lapua .243 case. The chamber design features a longer neck, blown out body and sharper shoulder. The designer called it the 6 Super BR, but it seems similar to some other long range 6mm designs I've read about. What's really working well for me is I have two rifles with chambers cut with the same reamer and fired brass from both chambers measures to within around .0005" of each other, which is about as accurate as I can measure with my caliper. My goal was to have two rifles that could share the same source of brass. Since it takes many steps to form this stuff and I have a lot of it, that is comforting. Also, the second chamber was the first one I cut myself, and although the second rifle has a barrel nut feature, I think the head space is about right. The original rifle does not have a barrel nut and is conventionally head spaced (2 lug BAT long range bench gun). I probably will segregate brass from one to the other, but at least the possibility is there of interchanging if necessary.
What concerns me is that, while I was at it, I also measured the die formed brass. Prior to fire forming, that brass is .005" short of the fire formed brass. I'm a little unclear as to how to set up such things, but I have about five hundred die formed pieces that I can fire form. Since the initial die forming happened 5 years ago and the gunsmith has since passed away, I was wondering what the best procedure would be. Usually when fire forming I try to have the bullet a few thousandths jam fit into the lands so the primer is held against the firing pin, but that .005" gap worries me a little bit. Is it common (read safe) for first firing brass to push the shoulder that far forward? I could put some color on the die formed brass, chamber it and look for contact in the area of the neck as the blown out shoulder might not form accurately when die formed. That would be my next step I suppose.
What concerns me is that, while I was at it, I also measured the die formed brass. Prior to fire forming, that brass is .005" short of the fire formed brass. I'm a little unclear as to how to set up such things, but I have about five hundred die formed pieces that I can fire form. Since the initial die forming happened 5 years ago and the gunsmith has since passed away, I was wondering what the best procedure would be. Usually when fire forming I try to have the bullet a few thousandths jam fit into the lands so the primer is held against the firing pin, but that .005" gap worries me a little bit. Is it common (read safe) for first firing brass to push the shoulder that far forward? I could put some color on the die formed brass, chamber it and look for contact in the area of the neck as the blown out shoulder might not form accurately when die formed. That would be my next step I suppose.