Could someone explain headspace, Do I Understand it to be the room that the cartridge has to slop around in your chamber , and when you fire the firing pin might move your case foreward till it touches the shoulder ,or belt on a magnum . If this is true then if you set your reloading dies up to just touch the shoulder ,with candle smoke , then is there no headspace?? So when you reload for semi-auto rifles like say the Rem. 742 in 30-06, you have to shrink the brass back to factory size ,So do you not get vary many reloadings with the brass before it stretches to much and the cartridge breaks into, so is it worth while to reload for this gun ??
I had to do this for some administrators. they didn't think I could. i did. they hated me more...
#1). guns go bang? Right?
#2). Guns go bang when the firing pin strikes the primer? Right?
#3). The properties that support the primer against the blow are "headspace."
the rest is details. Obviously, the rimmed cartridge be it .30/30 or .38 Special stop on the rim. Belted cartridges originally stopped on the belt. The real freaks, .45 ACP and .30 Carbine, among others, stop on the mouth of the case. And the shouldered rimless stop on the shoulder...
On the down side, if the distance is much too large, the firing pin cannot reach the primer. NO BANG! In between, DANGER, if the firing pin sets the round off and the neck grips the chamber, but the base has to stretch back too far and comes apart, then you have gases loose in the gun at 1 or 2 or more times the temperature of a cutting torch. If you are lucky, you are dead. If not, you wear dark glasses while they rebuild your face.luck