I have friends who handload a number of rounds, and I've bought dies for a couple of my rounds for us to reload together along with theirs.
I've come to wonder if they may be missing an important step.
The way they reload, they deprime the old ones in what I presume is a resizer die as well. They then lube the cases and toss them in a tumbler. Next they prime them, fill with the proper amount of the correct powder (that they do just fine), and seat the new bullets. I don't think they crimp but I could be wrong.
Far as I can tell, they don't segregate brass on how many reloads they've been through. And they do not trim as far as I know. I don't think they have a dial or digital caliper in their household or know what I'm talking about when I use the terms dimensional tolerances.
Concern - Years back I was shooting his 30-06 handloads through my Rem 710. At a couple of points, it was dang hard to chamber, ie took a lot of force. He of course blamed it on the stiff bolt of the Rem 710. I didn't think to argue. But lately we were shooting his Rem 700 with similar reloads, and dog gonnet that too was darn hard to chamber once in a while - this has always been on a round by round basis.
Question - Could this mean that the neck of the brass is too long due to being untrimmed, and is being forced too far into the throat of the rifle? And would this possibly result in excess pressures due to unusual constriction or even obstruction of the bullet?
Not only do I care greatly for the safety and accuracy of my own reloading, but dog gonnet these are my friends and if they're ignoring a vital safety related step in the reloading process I'd hate to just wait for an accident.