I am setting up to reload .204 in a Pro Hunter Blued barrel. I used two different methods to determine the COL with the bullet sitting against the Lands, and I came up with a COL's of 2.459 and 2.470. I know this is greater than the standard of 2.260, but I have also read that this isn't necessarily unusual.
Method (1) was to drop a bullet into the chamber, using a cleaning rod from the barrel end, I slid it down until I contacted the bullet, made a mark, removed the bullet, and then slid the rod down until I contacted the firing pin plate. This came out at 2.459.
Method (2) was to load a bullet extended out in an unprimed case, inserted the shell/bullet into the chamber and slowly closed the frame pushing the bullet into the case with the bullet against the lands. I marked the bullet with marker to ensure I showed some contact with the lands. This came out at 2.470.
My question is does this sound unreasonable? On the dummy bullet created by Method (2), it indicates that my bullet is only seated ~0.108" into the neck of the case. Is this adequate? If I am to back off 0.010" for initial loaded case COL, which of the method's lengths, should I go with? The shortest to be the safest?
I'm new to rifle reloading and I would appreciate any and all comments that I could get. I am using Winchester brass, BL-C(2) powder, Federal Prem primers, and plan to start the first load at 28.1 grs. But I'm a little baffeled at these COL numbers, and more so with the amount of depth the bullet sits in the neck on the dummy bullet.
Thanks!