I loaded my first round of ammo in the summer of 1979.There was no internet.The only sources of information I had were a Lyman and a Sierra reloading manual and several older guys who tried to help me along,especially my uncle.I thought I was doing ok,given the very limited funds I had to upgrade equipment with.I was 18 at the time and trying to save money for a vehicle to take me to the woods and to the various rifle shoots in the area,so it wasn't like I could afford to spend a lot of money.I knew nothing about cartridge runout until I went to a local match where there were some serious benchrest shooters.I somehow managed to win my class,which was for hunting rifles,and I had a very good shooting 280 that I had a local gunsmith screw a barrel onto a M700 action for me.I did the rest of the work myself to save money.That was in 1981.I made a lot of progress in 2 years time.Not long after that,I began sowing my wild oats,and I got away from shooting other than a little before hunting season.Once I hit my mid 40's I straightened up,sobered up and got back into shooting and reloading in a big way.That was in 2006.I learned a lot from the internet,a lot from other shooters,and I started getting good at making smallish groups with several of the decent rifles that I had,but it seemed like I was stuck as to how small I could go,so I went down the runout rabbit hole.The first thing I tried was the o-ring under the die.Nothing gained.Then I tried another press,and I found an older Pacific press that had a tight fitting ram with the little steel retainer to hold the shell holder.I made a softer retainer out of spring stock so the brass could move around a bit and the results spoke volumes.Where I was getting runout so bad I could see the bullet wobble when I rolled it across the bench,now I had to use a dial indicator to see it.Much better,but still not perfect.I was still sometimes getting over .010 runout.I started replacing dies,using Wilson seaters and various sizing dies,and I was able to gain a little ground,especially when I used the Wilson seaters.I'm still using that old Pacific press today,and it does what I want it to do.I size with either a Lee collet die or the Redding type S full length die.I recently bought a benchrest full length die from Forster,and I have been amazed with the results to say the least.They do the best job of sizing brass that I've seen,period.I screw it tight to the press,no o-ring or any other way to loosen things up other than some play in the shell holder.They have worked some kind of magic with the expander ball,getting it so smooth that I can barely feel when it goes through the case neck,and between the Forster sizing die and the Wilson seating die,I don't even bother to check for runout,and my ammunition loaded like that is very good.Once I did a test with a very accurate 223 bolt gun that I built a few years ago.With my best ammo,measured for minimum runout,it will produce groups in the .2's and .3's,sometimes going into the 1's for 5 shots at 100 yards.I loaded ammo with the good dies that I have,and I loaded some with the cheapest dies I had.I shot several groups,picking the rounds with the least runout loaded with the best dies,and picking the rounds with the most runout loaded with the cheap dies,some of which exceeded .010.The average difference in accuracy was almost exactly a quarter of an inch for 5 shot groups at 100 yards.Add up the cost of the better quality tools,and you have a very expensive quarter of an inch.Sorry to have written a book,but there's a lot of conversation that can be had about the runout thing,and there's no reason for any of that conversation to be unkind in any way.