I'm interested in interior neck polishing as a way to get more consistent seating depth.
Check out the dip in the unpolished seating force. I think the case flexes until the seating force exceeds the friction between the bullet and the case, then the bullet, "stutters," into the neck, almost in a stepwise function. Maybe polishing (the second graph in the below video) results in a smoother insertion of the case and less variation.
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Also, I've only been loading for precision rifle for about a year, but isn't neck tension relevant only in the amount of friction it imparts between the bullet and the case neck? I would guess that if you compared the seating force of lubed and lubed bullets, the neck tension would turn out to be far less significant.
Check out the dip in the unpolished seating force. I think the case flexes until the seating force exceeds the friction between the bullet and the case, then the bullet, "stutters," into the neck, almost in a stepwise function. Maybe polishing (the second graph in the below video) results in a smoother insertion of the case and less variation.

Reloadingallday on Instagram: "The results are in! The difference in seating force is pretty eye opening from simply polishing the inside of the neck with these brushes/polishers we just had made. The biggest thing that caught my eye was that their i
1,562 likes, 56 comments - reloadingallday on August 3, 2022: "The results are in! The difference in seating force is pretty eye opening from simply polishing the inside of the neck with these brushes/polishers we just had made. The biggest thing that caught my eye was that their isn’t a large...

Also, I've only been loading for precision rifle for about a year, but isn't neck tension relevant only in the amount of friction it imparts between the bullet and the case neck? I would guess that if you compared the seating force of lubed and lubed bullets, the neck tension would turn out to be far less significant.