Re: 308 neck thickness?
If you neck turn to that average, then all of your brass with thicknesses less than .015" will have different dimensions. Half of your necks will be too small.
Call me Mr. Money Bags, but I would toss the bottom 10% of neck sizes (or more correctly, I would put those aside for sighters and foulers) and then turn the rest to size. That size will probably be around .014".
If you turn to .012", you will be able to use a lot of brass, but now you are working your necks a lot as they expand to your relatively large chamber dimension and then are sized back every time you fire.
I don't know if you have measured necks in 3 or 4 different spots. You can identify brass with inconsistent neck wall thickness this way. If there is too much variation in a case, I would set aside brass that varies more than .001". The reason you do this is not to get consistent neck wall thickness, but the theory is that variation you spot at the neck will only increase as you get to the case head. Eventually, that brass will expand to become banana shaped... that is the theory at least. The reason I am bringing it up now is because if you plan on segregating brass this way, you need to do it before you turn the necks. Once you turn necks, you will have to measure at the case head to segregate, which requires an extra fancy tool and goes a little slower than measuring case necks the first time. It takes me an hour and a half or so to measure the necks at 4 places. Remember again, that you need to turn down to the smallest dimension. So if you measure case necks and get measurements of .0165", .0155", .0155", and .0140", you need to turn that case to at least .0140". If you turn to .015", you will now have a case with .001" neck variation... since you are turning to get rid of that in the first place, turning hasn't fixed your problem.
I put all of this in a spreadsheet and place each piece of brass in a labeled loading block, so I can look at piece # 307 and know what the wall thicknesses are at 12 o'clock, 3 o'clock, 6 o'clock, and 9 o'clock. I then figure out how much brass I acutally want to cull based on how many I have to throw out. I cull based on 1) neck wall thickness variation and 2) minimum dimension. If the minimum measured dimension is too small, then I don't turn it for the above reasons.
But then, I am obviously incredibly anal about all of this.