chipmaker wrote on May 11
th, 2015 at 4:13pm:
I reloaded several fired cases without resizing but still had a bit of primer set back.
Since the cartridge was head-spaced off the rim and the headspace gauge is also based off the rim, I don't see how there could be any forward movement of the cartridge on firing.
Since Egyptian GP actions have a large non standard thread, I didn't make a truing fixture to polish the breach block face, so the breach face may not be perfectly flat.
Also, because of the age and abuse that these actions have been subjected, there could well be some spring at the lever pin on firing.
Since I don't want a rifle that won't shoot factory ammo, my plan is to re-barrel the rifle with a low pressure cartridge.
Thanks to all who participated in this discussion.
Otto
Yes, a rimmed cartridge is spaced off the rim. But the cartridge will form itself to the chamber it's fired in. And if there is some excess headspace, the cartridge will back itself out of the chamber as pressure builds. So the shape of the case will be that of a cartridge slightly backed out, which will set the shoulder forward on a bottleneck case.
So just reloading the case the next time, and not full length resizing, will leave the case as it formed on the first firing. Thus if there is a slight headspace issue, the case wont be driven forward as the firing pin strikes it, so it wont do the back and forth movement of a fully resized case.
I've done this on a few old lever action repeaters that backed primers from too much headspace, and found afterwards that they no longer backed primers out.