I've wondered about that myself. (I'm another fully paid-up member member of the leave-the-carbon-film-inside-case-necks brethren). I believe most brass manufacturers dip newly finished cases in an acid solution of some sort. This may prevent any 'weld' occurring.
Lapua AFAIK doesn't do this and it was with new Lapua cases (and Lapua bullets) that I had the 50% of cartridges in a box produce trouble described somewhere early on in this thread.
Yep, leaving some black carbon residue in the neck helps to avoid “bullet weld”. Ran the experiments and confirmed that.
Some context: Initially used an ultrasonic cleaner and the brass was pristinely clean, zero carbon in the neck. Bullet weld would show up in 1/3 of the loaded rounds within 3 or 4 days. Got very bad after 3 weeks. Seating force would go up from the 20’s to 80 lbs plus.
Then switched to a vibratory tumbler with untreated walnut media and my impression at the time was that it got better, but the problem did not entirely go away. Wait long enough (2 or 3 weeks) and the bullets would reseat with a sudden think. K&M press with the force measurement tip reported 1.5 to 2.5x increase in seating force (lbs), nothing as excessive as before, but NOT the butter smooth seating i had at the time when originally seating the bullets. So better but not a complete cure.
Then somebody on snipers hide suggested Nu-Shine polymer car wax (the type you apply only once a year). That really made a difference.
Today stuck a good quality bore scope (with a lot of ‘amplification’) into my fired brass, and noticed that seating the bullet into the brass leaves very shiny scratch marks on the inside of the neck. Bare brass! Bullets also show mild scratches with the naked eye. Neck tension is moderate, around 0.002”. Maybe i should come down some more...
I think the polymer wax and the carbon in the neck reduces the scratching and consequent exposure of bare metal. Since the bullet will likely be scratched at the same location as the brass, you likely end up with bare copper jacket making hard contact with bare brass (freshly exposed). I would not be surprised if two metals started to interact and corrode due to the presence of water vapor inside and outside the case (humidity). Powder kernels are hygroscopic and absorbs some amount of water vapor if you leave it out in the open for a day. No idea what exact chemistry occurs or why. But something bad happens!
I still use the mix of mineral spirits (which dissolved carbon on the outside of the brass, does almost nothing to the inside of the brass), and Nu-Shine, plus mica dry lubricant applied to the bullet, but now load long and reseat every time before i go to the range. Good / better results in terms of SD and group size.
Run your own experiment and see what you get.