The reason that I turn into or onto the shoulder, is that if I do not, cases that have had their necks expanded and which have been turned, with no material removed on the shoulder, chamber very hard, well beyond having some feel, to the point that one should be concerned with frequent lug greasing. There is not virtue to this, and it fact at the moment that the bolt is forced closed, a doughnut if formed inside of the case at the neck shoulder junction. Given the short bullets and their typical neck engagement, this is of no functional consequence, but I thought that it was worth passing along. When I turn, I cut a on the shoulder such that as soon as I see the full width of the angled part of the cutter, I quit, leaving an edge of cut that can hardly be caught with a fingernail. Properly done, this leaves me with some light feel of the case as the bolt is closed prior to fire forming. An extension of this situation has come about because no matter how carefully I try, expanding up from .220 to 6mm makes the necks crooked enough so that when I turn, the cut on the shoulder is uneven, because the necks are cocked in relation to the case body. For this reason, given that I have a dedicated fire forming barrel, I try to use a different method most of the time.
I expand to .22 cal and turn to .010 thickness (for a .262 chamber neck) and then prime put in powder (NOT PISTOL BUT ONE SUITABLE FOR A 6PPC) up to where the back of the bullet will be, and seat a cheap 55gr. BT bullet carefully using my 6PPC Wilson seater. The seating depth is not important. I usually seat them so that there is about a caliber of shank in the neck, or a little less. The BT helps them seat straight in the oversized seater. The next step is to fire them in my 6PPC fire forming barrel, standing close enough to a safe backstop s that the inaccuracy will not put a bullet over it. Do not shoot at some low distant backstop when doing this. The result is a very straight case that is close enough to the neck diameter that I will turn at so that the slight expanding to 6mm leaves the cases very straight. I do not try to remove all of the powder fouling from the forming shot before lubing the inside of the necks, expanding and turning. I just run a bronze bore brush that has been retired to case neck duty, in and out 3-4 times. After I have turned them, I trim to 1.490 lightly chamfer and deburr. The cases that I make this way are very straight. Because these cases are fired at .22 cal, and there is none of the neck in the shoulder from expanding to 6mm I don't have to turn onto the necks except to finish the neck cut, to get them to chamber. This should be tested on your rifle.