Well, I have been working on forming the 9.3X74R case into .40-85 Ballard. After fire forming a few cases, I attempted loading them. I was using .40-65 dies to expand the case mouth and immediately found that the expander would not go into the case very far before the case walls would bulge (buckle) below the expander. I cleaned the case interior and even tried dry neck lube with no improvement. The expander would not enter far enough to reach the flairing segment. To remedy that, I used a smaller expander and carefully just "kissed" it to obtain a small flair. Next problem was when seating slugs longer than the distance the expander went in, the case would bulge below the bullet and prevent it from chambering.
Some cases were just fire formed; some I annealed and both had the same problems.
I had attempted to modify the cases by progressively expanding the mouth. The first one went okay, but every subsequent one expanded off center. These I then fire formed, but the case mouths were extremely uneven.
The brass I have is Norma. Maybe it's too hard; too thick?
I was able to get eight rounds loaded so they would chamber. I fired these with a 335 gr. slug, a moderate powder charge and some COW to take up the air space. All fired nicely. I thought these cases would be easy to reload, but the same problem persisted with case bulging below the seated bullet preventing it from chambering. This occurred with both annealed and non-annealed cases.
I have a feeling the chamber on this rifle was cut tight (too tight?) as fired cases won't accept the expander nor new bullets.
Plan "B" is to convert this into 40-65. I don't shoot BP, so I don't need the case capacity. I have those dies and brass.
Frustrated.