In Boyer's book, he says that when his cases begin to "click" on extraction, he discards them. As I understand, the "click" is caused by case head expansion which has increased enough to cause sticking in the chamber after firing. At that point, the bolt lift is impeded at the primary extraction cam and must be leveraged on the scope ring or otherwise to get it to break loose from the chamber wall and begin to extract. Then it "clicks." I think, this is basically right, but if I'm missing something, please correct me. The main problem with cases that "click," is that they disrupt the shooting sequence; important in competition, but equally important when hunting (maybe excepting varmints).
So a couple of questions. First, if cases start to click, can FL sizing bring them back? I know that it will size the head to the point where they will not click during a test extraction before they are fired, but at least some that I've tested will click again after being fired even once. I have some impossible to find cases that are starting to click...I'd like to preserve them if possible. Any possibilities?
From previous threads (and TB's book), it seems the ideal die is a custom FL die that sizes the body just smaller than the chamber and has a neck sizing bushing. For some calibers (not neck sized), this is not practical. What's the best practice for these.
So a couple of questions. First, if cases start to click, can FL sizing bring them back? I know that it will size the head to the point where they will not click during a test extraction before they are fired, but at least some that I've tested will click again after being fired even once. I have some impossible to find cases that are starting to click...I'd like to preserve them if possible. Any possibilities?
From previous threads (and TB's book), it seems the ideal die is a custom FL die that sizes the body just smaller than the chamber and has a neck sizing bushing. For some calibers (not neck sized), this is not practical. What's the best practice for these.