The other day I was doing some experimentation with my Series II equipment. I was wondering if it was possible to make one of my bullets longer than the 1.3" that Corbin says is the limit of this equipment.
I took a 1.28" jacket, and made a 290 grain bullet with one of my tips that increased the length to 1.46". Since the bullet seemed to come out OK, I decided to measure the diameter to make sure it formed properly in the die. Instead of .358 the bullet measured at about .3572 (at least it was just over .357 according to my caliper). I ran the caliper back down to zero, to make sure that it was still set properly, and it was.
Then I decided to check out some 220's that I made earlier in the day. These measured the same as the 290's. I was now really concerned. Before calling up Dave Corbin, and bothering him with this, I decided to check out some of my store-bought .358 bullets. To my relief, they also measured at .3572.
So it seems my caliper lacks the accuracy I need. I guess I'm going to have to invest in a better quality caliper - probably one of those digital jobs that measures to the 10,000ths that I seem to need. But I've also learned that I can make heavier bullets with my equipment.