Weird Browning A-bolt 30-06 Reload COAL

I have several rifles that have been built by the same smith on the same platform; Ruger 77, tang safety rifles. Whenever I build or purchase a rifle my son ends up with one too. What I have noticed is that some of the loads in his rifle do not like what my rifle likes. My son has a 35 Whelen that will blow primers out with the same load that is the most accurate load for my Whelen. I can say the same about several other rifles that are exactly the same. I would like to suggest that maybe purchasing a set of comparators and some dial verniers would help figure out your situation quickly. I bought a tap and a tap drill on Amazon and I make my own "special cases" that are used to make the measurements to determine where the bullet meets the lands.
 
Most likely needs a shoulder bump, could be a Ojive issue as well.
Fired cases in one 30-06 that hadn't been sized properly will not chamber in another rifle, even if it's the same caliber. I neck size and shoulder bump my rifles knowing they will not chamber in anyone else's rifle.
 
Loads perfect without a bullet. I noted in my log to seat them to under 3.2.
So, anything over 3.2" with your current bullet choice, you are jamming the bullet into the lands. In short, you are stuck with that unless you have a competent/reputable gunsmith work on it to have a longer throat.
 
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No. Hornady interbond, sst and sierra hotcore

As I mentioned in Post #7 above, COAL length is a fairly useless reference as soon as you switch bullet types. The tip of the bullet never engages the lands. It's the body of the bullet at full diameter that engages the lands and determines how long the maximum COAL can actually be. Desired COAL will depend on doing some accuracy tests

Every bullet you mentioned above will have a different seating depth. You need to follow the steps outlined in Post #7 to determine the derived max COAL for each different bullet and your chamber.
 
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