Further information to follow
Thanks for your responses, suggestions and follow up questions. I don't have my cases or calipers with me at the moment and will follow up with some additional data. My calipers are not digital, so I will do my best to "read between the lines" on the exact dimensions of the case neck, base and length of fired and unfired rounds. I might have trimmed these cases many years ago when I first bought them, but I haven't trimmed or measured them since. I do chamfer and deburr the cases after reloading them about 5 times or so.
To elaborate, the Remington AR brass have been reloaded approximately 10 times. I have reloaded the various ACP brass many more times without any problem. I use a roll crimp on my AR brass (standard on a RCBS 3-die set) with just enough crimp to pass the plunk test. The new rounds load and plunk fine without any apparent head space problem because the cylinder closes with ease. I do not recall having this problem during the first several times I reloaded this same brass.
My 625 is rather tight between the cylinder and firing pin side of the receiver which is exemplified by requiring my moon clips (used with ACP) to be stoned before the cylinder will close with ease. I have never had trouble closing the cylinder with AR rounds.
As to my reloads, I have never come close to reloading maximum loads. Typically, my loads are between the minimum load to just about mid-range. In addition to the Bullseye loads I referenced, my most recent problem was experienced with AR brass, Hornady 200 gr LSWC over 4.9 - 5.0 grains of TightGroup with a CCI primer. I know my loads are very light compared to
factory 230 gr FMJ in ACP which I have shot. Again, I have never had any problem ejecting ACP brass either from factory loads or my reloads. All of my AR and ACP cases are brass. I have never reloaded nickel cases in .45. Many years ago when I reloaded high velocity .357 loads, I did have a few cases which expanded (bulged) due to high pressures and they were also hard to eject. During those years, I did reload towards the maximum levels, but again, that was a different gun and different caliber. My recollection is that heavy loads cause cases to bulge and light loads cause cases to lengthen. I did not notice any signs which indicated that the cases might have lengthened after firing such as rubbing against the back of the receiver.
During my last session where I experienced this problem, I used the exact same load in ACP and AR brass (200 gr LSWC over 5.0 grs of TightGroup). The only difference was the AR round had a slight roll crimp and the ACP brass had a slight taper crimp. The recoil differential between these two rounds was insignificant, so I presume the pressure differential was also relatively small. It is possible my gun was a little dirty since I had not cleaned it after the last 500 rounds or so. But again, the unfired bullets dropped in without any resistance.
One additional thing I noticed was that the spent ACP brass from my 1911 has a little soot mark on one side of the case whereas my 625 does not leave the same soot mark. I presume the chamber of my revolver is a little tighter, but again, the live rounds easily pass the plunk test.
One thing which came to mind was that it may be possible that the rim of the AR case is forming a tighter seal against the chamber and cylinder which prevents some gases from escaping out the back. The lack of an easy exhaust path may be causing the brass to expand excessively. This seems a little far fetched since the path of least resistance for the gas is to go forward through the barrel / cylinder gap rather than in reverse towards the case rim.
Another thought was that the Remington AR brass might have thinner walls than any of my ACP brass. I do not have the ability to measure the case thickness, but I use a variety of ACP brass (S&W, Federal, IMI, W-W, WWC, R-P and PMC) and have not had problems with any of them in my revolver. I only have one brand of AR brass.
I will follow up with some dimensions, probably later tonight. Thanks again for your comments and input.