Re: Crimp or no crimp?
Rather than crimping to increase neck tension, I turn the expander ball down one or two thousandths to increase neck tension. If all your cases aren't exactly the same length, the crimp can vary wildly in how much it is applied. Shorter cases may even have no crimp applied.
As with all reloading, consistency is the key. If you trim everything to exactly the same length, it probably won't matter whether you use a crimp, or smaller expander ball to get the proper neck tension.
Some people feel that crimping increases accuracy. My experience is the opposite of that. Every time I try a crimp on precisely trimmed cases, my accuracy decreases, even when powder capacity is changed to make up for the increased pressure of the crimp. When I went to the turned down expander ball method, my accuracy improved.
The military has to use a crimp because the ammo is often used in full auto firearms. My ammo is for matches.
However, I will admit that at the last match, I did have one failure to chamber when a bullet got pushed back into the case. There is always a first. Out of the last 10,000 rounds I have fired, this is the first one where the bullet was pushed back into the case. Clearing the malfunction cost me 5-10 seconds more on the stage.