Bozo: Glad you admitted you don't know anything about short bench rest. Your long-range knowledge is still quite suspect in my mind. I guess that puts us on even ground there. To shoot at 1,000 and truly be good are two things entirely. I would truly enjoy shooting against you - perhaps some day... I'm retired and have the means to come to you. Not sure what your babbling over using rasps and files are all about - but you can use those tools if you wish. I won't fault you any more than I already have..
Butchlambert: I like all your techniques and use most myself, sans the inside neck reaming- and have with my 6PPCs for almost 30 years. Interesting that someone came up with all of these good ideas and you use them as I do. Learning from others isn't so bad. I do believe finding a better way to uniform neck thickness is out there. If you were really concerned with seating pressure, you might be on-board with the subject - if not my method. It is a method that works but may be more work than you feel is worth it. That's O.K. by me. If there is anybody out there that thinks getting necks more uniform is better than not - I'm with them. If they can show me a better way to do it - I'm with them. I have tried many. If you reread my posts from the beginning - the idea is just to bring the neck seating pressure into closer proximity to one another. Taking a slight amount of material off with sandpaper from the thicker necks - when it is a smaller amount than can be reasonably dialed in on the neck turner - works. It is only done one time at the time of initial brass prep time. It has nothing to do with whether the cases are loaded prior to or the day of the match. I realize the neck tension relaxes as loaded ammo sits around for a while. One of the several reasons we don't like that is because S-O-M-E- of the bullets can easily be pushed in when chambering - ruining our depth seating. Theoretically, if all the necks were EXACTLY the same, as were the bullet diameters, same amount of moly, same level of annealing, eg., when this did happen - it would all happen exactly the same. And you know that's not going to happen. Why? Lack of uniformity. All were trying to do here is make a component more uniform. You mention the neck tension changing after my procedure is accomplished.
Again, I think you are missing the big picture here. The tension on your necks is going to change no matter what you do to them. Bringing them closer to one another in thickness, for example, is not going to make it worse unless they are in need of an annealing job. Simple task.
A lot of people have devised their own seating pressure devices and a lot of K&M presses with the dial have been sold. These people don't just buy these things so they can determine the uniformity (or lack thereof) of their seating pressure. They want to do something about improving it as well. Bozo believes that's' what neck cutters are for. Sure - but they only get you so close. If that's "good nuff' for him, he will save a lot of time not weighing bullets, brass, measuring base-to-ogive, weighing powder loads to 1/20th grain weight individually, checking each round for concentricity, truing the meplats, pointing the bullets and/or a host of other things most SERIOUS 1,000 yard competitors do.
I'm betting BIG TIME that neither you or Bozo have the K&M pressure press or another brand or type of measuring press. You probably know someone who does. I think you would get a real kick using it to load your best brass that you think is really uniform. Real eye-opener and you will no longer entirely trust your micrometers alone.