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New lapua brass?

Without knowing what type of chamber or gun you are shooting it out of it would be impossible to say exactly what to do. I personally run it all through a full length sizer to make sure the neck is round and free from defects.
 
It depends on how they measure, and what level of accuracy you need.

For 1/2 MOA, I wouldn't bother with much more than rounding out the necks and chamfering the mouth.

For 3/8 MOA, I would measure necks and see if there is any need for turning.

For 1/4 MOA, I would check the flash holes for burrs.

For less than 1/4 MOA, I would suggest a light cleanup turn on the necks, flash hole reaming (Sinclair tools works well), and volume measurement after fire-forming. In addition, I would be on the lookout for odd ducks in the batch - even Lapua is not above having an outlier.

That's just how I operate my equipment, your mileage may vary...
 
At minimum I would either F/L, neck or collet size for the reasons Jon stated and also to open the necks a bit to reduce bullet seating pressure. Factories are operating full tilt and I see evidence of brass being outside the parameters of normal Q.C. expectations. Including Lapua.
 
I'd check each piece for burrs, possibly chamfer the mouths and check for roundess, but otherwise, I fireform the brass before ever putting it into a die. I'm of the opinion there is nothing to be gained by taking new virgin brass and FL resizing it. All the serious an detailed prep work comes AFTER the fireforming process.

Alex
 
Trim to a set length. Chamfer/deburr case mouth. Expand the necks and neck turn. Uniform primer pockets. Deburr flash holes.

This is what I do. "Match prep"
 
savageshooter86 said:
Trim to a set length. Chamfer/deburr case mouth. Expand the necks and neck turn. Uniform primer pockets. Deburr flash holes.

This is what I do. "Match prep"

If you are using a no-turn chamber I would NOT do most of the above for a .243.

1. Visually check flash-holes to see if there are obstructions. Knock flakes out with a small bit as necessary.

2. Run an appropriate expander mandrel down the neck to ensure round-ness and release neck tension a little.

3. Very mild inside chamfer (don't try to remove much brass, just smooth the entry).

4. Trim to length after first firing -- that way you can keep the necks as long as possible.

Whether you FL size first or not, kind of depends on how the cases fit in your chamber.
 

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