Nothing wrong with RCBS. I have RCBS and Redding for the RUM based chamberings I load for and shoot.I have a 650 and would not resize RUMs on it. Too much flex in the base plate. IMO You will break it before you can bump the shoulder.
What I believe after reading this far is that:
You have a wide, short chamber. Not a bad thing but...
When you resize you are reducing the diameter of the case but the shoulder is "moving" up. Think squeezing a balloon. Which is a great metaphor for cases anyway. In many ways then are balloons with a cork in them......
so You are not bumping the shoulder back far enough. IMO you will break your Dillon if you try.
IIWM:
You can keep using the Dillon for the remainder of the reloading process just without the sizing die.
- Get a single state press to resize the RUM brass in. Something fairly strong. Get the Recommended RCBS shell holder, it's on the box and I think its a #38 but could be a #4.
- Get a Hornady headspace comparator. Measure a fired case that will rechamber nicely, on the shoulder per the instructions, then measure a sized case. Adjust your die until the sized case is .001 to .003 shorter.
When I use my Dillon for rifle reloading, I do this or similar:
- Clean the brass.
- Resize without the expander ball.
- Clean off lube.
- Use the Dillon to complete the reloading process. Instead of a resize die in the first position, a neck expander die. The rest is the same.
I agree.
In addition to the above:
A 40 cal pistol case can be used for a comparator until you get a real one. Aim for .002-.003" shoulder bump for reliable feeding. Compare your resized case length to the shoulder with the comparator( or a 40 case) to a fired case.