What do you do when the primer pockets get so loose in your 6PPC cases that there is practically no inference fit to speak of……..and the things still shoot as good as ever.
Over 20 years ago, Gene Bukys and several of us did some experimenting with primer seating depth and primer pocket uniforming on 6PPC cases made from Lapua 220 Russian.
I would bet shooters like Boyd Allen who have been around a while  remembers our write up on Benchrest.com.
He had an adjustable primer seater that allowed you to seat primers from dead flush to a firm bottoming out in the cup.
Using our Rail Guns, we spent a full day playing with different depths, and none of it showed up on the target as long as they were all the same. We came to the conclusion that simply seating the primer to where it was seated on the inside of the pocket was as good as anything.
But keep in mind, we were not worrying about ES or SD, all we were interested in was the agging capability of thr rifle at 200 yards. That being the rifles ability to stack one bullet atop the other.
 
Maybe federal 205 primers were better 20 years ago.
We also took ten cases that had the pockets uniformed, and ten that didn’t. We mixed them all together and to our surprise, the results did not show up on our targets as long as we seated the primer against the bottom of the pocket.
I made a complete write up on Benchrest.com. Our conclusions were that primer uniformity had a un noticeable affect on the rifles agging capability. Just seat them the same way each time, preferably seated against the bottom of the primer pocket.
I don’t think Gene or I ever “uniformed” a Lapua 220 Russian primer pocket again.
 I commend Bryan for his efforts in this. For those that want to worry about this sort of thing, it is great information.