Some things to think about...
If you "uniform" the primer pockets, you are cutting the bottom of the primer pocket with a tool that indexes and uses as a reference, the cartridge
face... that place where all the little writing is.
But ALL of the "precision" priming tools use the inside back wall of the extractor grove as the indexing reference.
Now, problem #1... there is no precision standard for this wall - the cartridge companies put the groove there so you can get the damn cases out of the gun after you have fired them.
SAAMI groove specifications for a standard (0.473) case head.
Note, the groove can vary from 0.039" to 0.049"... and it does, even in the box or bag of brass. This is NOT one of the manufacturer's important measurements... like head space, which is held to a much higher tollerence of XXX.XXX -0.007" (whoops).
So if you are buying a priming tool and want to have "precision", you are looking at tools in the $125 to $600 (YIKES) range... but none of them can actually hold those tolerances.
If you have a tool with a real cool micrometer on it, and a dial indicator on it... you still have a tool that uses it's basic reference index point, a groove that varies by 10 times the precision that is either advertised or implied.
Problem #2... you cannot pre-sensitize the primer. The priming pellet is primarily made of Sodium Azide, which detonates at 17,000 feet per second. If you do the math, that means from the time the first crystal cracks, until the whole primer is consumed, takes ~ 0.00000003.7 of a second (3.7/100,000,000 of a second). There is NOTHING you can do that will change this.
From the time that the first reloading tool company did some research and discovered that the more dials and micrometer thingies you put on a tool, the more you can charge for it, we now have "micrometer and dial" priming tools available to us.
But a very strong case can be made that manual priming (seat "n" crush) tools are more accurate then these magic wonders that eat our money faster than an Ex wife to be, on the way to the lawyer's office.