I dont crimp my 9mm loads. I flare the mouth to .377 on .356 bullets and .376 on .355 bullets. I also slightly chamfer the mouth as it helps the bullet slide it. Icewater, have you heard of the plunk test? I helped a fellow reloader earlier this week and some bullets would plunk at 1.150 and the next bullet wanted 1.142. These were Barry's plated bullets. Make a couple dummy rounds, no primer and flare the mouth to .376 and see if the bullet will set on the case. The rounded corners of the bullet should disappear into the case. It may take a flare of .377 if its a .356 diameter bullet. Unscrew the plunger and seat the bullet long as in 1.169. Pull the barrel out of your gun and drop the dummy round into the chamber and listen for the plunk of the case bottoming out in the chamber. Grab the case head and pick it up and drop it a few more times as you rotate the round. If the bullet hits the lands, the bullet will stick and be hard to pull out of the chamber and, you will not hear the plunk... Seat the bullet deeper until you get repeated drops while rotating the round. Easy to pick up and a plunk on the drops. I normally seat .003 to .005 deeper cause not all bullets will be the same shape, length, etc.. I normally find around .004 difference in a box of 100 of high quality bullets and I have seen up to .018 differences.
After you make a couple dummies, cycle them through the gun a few times and measure the lengths to make sure you have no set-back of your bullets. Out of the 3 die sets I have worked with for 9mm, the case mouth diameters ranged from .370, .372 and .374, all of these did not have any set-back. But, do your own testing.
My last range session was testing crimped loads vs no-crimped load of identical specs. All groups fired that were non-crimped were more accurate and velocity was a tad higher than the crimped version.