The loading procedure I described I also use in my SAMMI spec chambered rifles, a long time ago when I first started to understand what it took to produce quality repeatable match grade ammo, I was like most of us out there chasing accuracy, if you are serious about accuracy? I asked a lot of questions on this forum, and I had friends that were competition shooters, that was back in the late 80's that were also serious hand loaders, though times and tooling have changed a lot since then and I have had to adapt different loading methods from the days of old, My friend Sonny Forbs told me this, runout is not your friend, he told me your bullets need to be as centered to the bore as possible, if you start off trying to force a bullet into the rifling off center it won't fly strait, because you are swaging the bullet as it goes into the rifling, That said, there is a lot more to building accurate ammo than this, IMO your brass prep is the most important step to start, and using good brass! JMO, I do not use a die that touches the neck when sizing the case body, neck sizing is done separately, LEE collet dies are not that expansive, they are a mandrel type die that create neck tension for your bullets, my 308win die gives 2.5k of tension on my bullets and 1k or less of runout, my latest 308win build with a Criterion 1&10 twist 26''BB has a SAMMI spec chamber hand lapped match barrel has less than 80rnds down the tube with my hand loads will shoot a small ragged hole in the paper at 100m. the bore is IMO just now starting to get a good copper fouling, after 40rnds the barrel went from shooting 1MOA to 1 ragged hole, just sayin.