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P O Ackley (who knew a thing or two about fire-forming) recommended "good, snappy charges" in order to blow out the case to full size the first firing and avoid the wastage and exasperation that you are experiencing. It is relatively easy with "improved" capacity cases of the same caliber--all one needs is the standard loading, with bullet, for the unimproved round. Blowing a case out to a different caliber, or worse, a straight-wall case, especially an obsolete one, is not so straightforward and getting the proper charge in the absence of a bullet is simply a matter of experimentation. I would recommend that you take your powder measure to the range, with de- and recapper, filler and a sheet of wax. Start with the powder charge you used to get your shells this far and carefully dial up, one case at a time, until they are blown out fully. Use that charge to finish up the intermediates and the rest of your cases. Take good notes so you don't have to do this over again, at least with this caliber. Even if it is a blackpowder cartridge, I would go with smokeless powder and a filler, as it is easier and cheaper for this application. You don't have to clean the not fully formed cases for the next try, and you can dial in whatever pressure you need to get the case formed. Expect uneven case mouths and a need for a little trimming to even up. Don't get discouraged. It took me a couple trips to the dump before I got my .30-30 to .38-55 load down (9 gr Bullseye and Cream of Wheat to top of annealed case, wax wad to hold it in). I would not expect that load to work in a larger capacity case, like a .303 or .30-40, but it would be a starting point.
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