"Cannuck",
I made a new friend last summer, a seven-time Queen's Cup Canadian National Rifle champion who is also an armourer at Connaught Ranges during the annual shooting competitions. You've probably heard of him: Ron Surrette. He is also a professional gunsmith and reloader.
When I told him of my problems with short case life in shooting and reloading for my Lee-Enfields, his immediate response was, "Don't full-length resize your cases, and be sure to clock the brass."
He explained that asymmetric case stretch was fairly common in surplus .303 Lee-Enfields, and that wartime rushed production often made for eccentric and over-long chambers, as well as normal wear and tear on the action.
The avoidance of full-lenth resizing I knew about, but the advice to "clock the cases" was new. He explained that a chamber or bolt that is even slighted cocked off the centreline of the bore will stress one side of the cartridge case more than the other. By always indexing a cartridge into the chamber the same way each time it is fired, the stress is minimized. He reported that this will easily double or triple the number of times a case can be reloaded!
I haven't tried it yet, but I will!