Has anyone experienced what the implications on group size are for typical runout experienced with a Lee collet neck sizing die vs rounds that are sorted or perfectly concentric at 100 to 600 yards? I'm prioritizing my next purchases and concentricity seems like something easy enough to manage.
When I turn the brass in my hands and squeeze the neck between thumb and finger I can feel that it doesn't seem like it's even in thickness and concentricity at the neck. I started cleaning the carbon off my necks which my gun seems to deposit a lot on and that helped a lot, then I started cleaning my dies a lot which helped a little, then I started sizing 3 or so times as I rotate a little each time and that also seems to help but I can still measure and feel a little unevenness. Not sure if it's more effective to buy a concentricity gauge and sort rounds or a neck turner. Eventually I'll get both, just looking at upcoming expenditures.
When I turn the brass in my hands and squeeze the neck between thumb and finger I can feel that it doesn't seem like it's even in thickness and concentricity at the neck. I started cleaning the carbon off my necks which my gun seems to deposit a lot on and that helped a lot, then I started cleaning my dies a lot which helped a little, then I started sizing 3 or so times as I rotate a little each time and that also seems to help but I can still measure and feel a little unevenness. Not sure if it's more effective to buy a concentricity gauge and sort rounds or a neck turner. Eventually I'll get both, just looking at upcoming expenditures.