Most of my non 6PPC critical loading has been done helping a friend who has several top built long range rifles that were built for non-competition use, but which are shot with the highest expectations for accuracy. Short range test groups needed to have bullet hole cut bullet hole. In that process, we ran into a bump runout (excessive range of runout using the same die setting) that we cured by annealing just enough to uniform the bumps (two calibers) without loosing neck tension to the point where feeding from the magazine would be a problem for concentricity. Having a large shooting budget he bought a two torch rotary annealer, and three different heats of Templiq to set it up with. Later we got some solvent to reconstitute the one that we ended up using on a regular basis. since it would dry up some in the bottle over time. Beyond that, his dies were a good match to the chamber reamers that his smiths had used (luck), and he seated all bullets with Wilson seaters. Another friend who uses threaded, sliding sleeve type seaters, and who builds his own rifles, to high standards has been able to do small modifications to his seating dies to bring their results up to the level that he gets with arbor press dies. In the chase for concentricity, having a FL die that is a good match for the chamber that it is used with seems to give better results. He uses bushing FL dies. Redding and RCBS. He uses a Chargemaster for measuring charges, not going the full route of weighing an trickling to a finer standard, although he has a scale that he could use to do that. We have had to do some shooting refinement to fix a couple of problems. We have done his load workups loading at the range, taking good notes, shooting over wind flags. He seems to be able to get good groups at 100 yd. even though his rifles have barrels with twist rates suitable for typical long range bullets. He uses SMK bullets for all of his out of state and foreign hunting and has made pretty much all one shot kills, including some very long shots, which he is well prepared for, with drop charts that are prepared for each location's altitude, and expected weather. IMO, his ammo would stand muster for any application, with the exception of powder charges not being quite so accurate as many long range shooters use. Personally, measured at the back of the ogive I like to see .002 or less runout on loaded rounds, and have found this adequate for competition accuracy in short range benchrest matches. It can be trickier to arrive at for longer rounds, but with good brass and good dies it can be done. After annealing (which had to be repeated to maintain the desired results) he had a total range of right at .001 from shortest to longest, for shoulder bump. This was for 7mmWSM and .338 Lapua. I know that this answer has ranged a bit far afield from your question, but I do not think that the information will cause you much harm ;-) Getting back to your question my friend who builds fine rifles shoots at long ranges with some friends a extreme ranges, up to and over 1,000 yards with good results, using cases that are in the range of +- a 6mm Rem.'s capacity, with 6mm and 6.5mm bores, does quite well (to your standards and better) using carefully loaded but unannealed brass. His load workups are exacting, and his shooting equipment is first rate. He competes at short range benchrest, and holds his own quite well.