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Hmmm??? Did you mike the necks first to see how thickness might play into your concentricity measurements?Maybe it's just "me" ... but my testing shows my new Lapua (.300) and Peterson (6.5) brass mandrelled out of the box, gives me consistent concentricity of 1,000th +/- about 25%. When I neck turn (K&M) that consistently degrades to as much as 2,000th in concentricity ... but pretty much never achieves out-of-box-plus-mandrel levels of concentricity. Hence ... I've determined it's just not worth the time, expense, and aggravation. I no longer neck-turn. Obviously, some love it, some hate it. I've decided "ambivalence" to neck turning is the strategy for me. If I start seeing my concentricity suffer, I will revisit this. But so far for me, mandrelling new and fired brass, and using a quality FL bushing die (Redding Type-S with SAC bushings) is working just fine and providing low SD's and good accuracy at distances to a mile. Not trying to pick a fight ... just sharing my experiences.
I don't know what "mike the necks" means ... never heard that before. And yes, neck exterior concentricity is what I'm measuring on my Sinclair concentricity gauge.Hmmm??? Did you mike the necks first to see how thickness might play into your concentricity measurements?
Also, I'm assuming it's your neck's concentricity that you're referring to???
"mike the necks" = measure the neck thickness with a ball micrometerI don't know what "mike the necks" means ... never heard that before. And yes, neck exterior concentricity is what I'm measuring on my Sinclair concentricity gauge.