A more logical approach might have been to ask what people's experiences has been with two step resizing.
This is true for sure. Otherwise it's setup for mob -vs- gang
battle, instead of
logical discussion.
Along the line of PracticalTactical's input, I see the chamber as my best die.
I couldn't be happier with my cases as pulled from a smoking chamber, and it's sad in a sense that anything I do to it from there represents detriment. So what I do is minimal.
I do not do anything that leads to repeated brass trimming, constant annealing, opening pockets, or replacements. Every die I have/had are custom in some way or otherwise just right for my sizing plan.
I could do it with a custom FL die, but I do not want to size FL of necks. I want separate adjustment of neck sizing lengths and I like that I can change bushings. I mandrel expand separately for similar reason.
All necks turned.
For case bodies, I don't want cases growing and going to popping extractions and loosening pockets, so I never 'let' them do that. If a case does anyway, it will forever want to go back there, so I toss it.
This is for small hunting cartridges, 223rem, 6br, 6dasher, 6XC, 260AI, 26wssm, etc., at or near SAAMI max.
So I keep chambers tight at webs, letting my chamber/breech support be the die. The lowest sizing I do is 1-1.5thou shoulder bumping with body dies set up as bump dies.
Something would be bigly broken if my loaded runout exceeded 1thou. That's just no way.
This works as good as it gets for me. An example of how someone could separate sizing & why.
I know it wouldn't work for a 30-06, nor be competitive with a 6PPC. But I don't shoot those.
If I did, then I might have gone
rat turd in a violin case, and reformed my brass with every reload cycle.
And I'd be trimming and annealing and/or replacing brass constantly I'm sure.