Thanks. Lots of calibers. I am needing to buy mandrels and bushings for 22 creed, 6 dasher, 6 arc, 25x47 lapua, 6.5 creed, 6 PRC. I was previously using non bushing style dies with the expander ball but recently bought SAC dies for everything. Brass is alpha and lapua. I also anneal every firing. I understand that there will be some trial and error and I will probably have to tweak them for optimum results, but I am just looking for guidelines on what to order to start with.
Okay, but get your checkbook out..... LOL
You have already heard some good advice above, and it is easy enough to buy a few bushings and mandrels bigger and smaller to try... but then what?
I would suggest you pick the rifle that lets you have your highest confidence and focus for a while on the neck prep. Pick just one caliber and tool up completely before you order for the rest. You may find you like one method for all, or you may end up with several methods based on context. Take it a step at a time and work on your skills using a test-mule before taking the plunge on all the others.
If you can run seating force measurements to get feedback it really helps.
Hopefully one of your list is a well behaved heavy barreled match gun that won't hurt you if you burn it up. A heavy section match barrel lets you shoot a lot without heating it up as fast as a lightweight carry gun.
I like to teach this by introducing it with a heavy section target rifle that allows the student to shoot far down the trajectory. This allows all of the speed and group characteristics to fully develop, but without getting into debates about how some bullets go through sonic transition and others don't.
It is counterintuitive to start with a rig where the sensitivity of brass prep is low, but it gives a valuable lesson when the next step is to run the neck prep lessons on a high-recoil lightweight carry rifle. One rifle can show the student how wide the window can run and makes it all look easy, and then other is humiliating.
Rather than humble them at the start, the easy rifle gets them a view of how the brass stress/strain relationship and the friction coefficient of the neck-bullet works.
These are lessons in material science and metalworking skills that are somewhat independent of internal ballistics and load tuning.
As an example, there are several tooling methods and yield approaches to get the same finished neck diameter.
You can minimally move the brass, or you can swing it up and down hard, ending up at the same neck ID. But, those methods change the work hardening history on the brass, as well as having their effect on the consistency of the whole batch. (Annealing can play a role, but don't do it if you are not good at it. Bad annealing is worse than no annealing.)
Just as a discussion example... If I use the concept of the Lee Collet die in 223 as an example..., when using a 0.222" diameter mandrel, the method does the minimum cold work to size the brass. It basically doesn't add any residual shear stress and only moved the brass down onto the mandrel. This is the least amount of extra yield and cold work to move the brass, just to illustrate.
At another extreme, we can us a bushing to force the neck into yield down to 0.219" and then open it with a mandrel back to 0.222"
With the elastic part of this, we would have to move below and above those diameters to get those values. A longer path to get to the same ending point.
So, how hard we push the neck diameters down and back up is up to us and rather than tell you what to do I will say you should play with all methods as a rookie and have the differences in your skill set. You end up having to test and shoot a lot before you can really understand the differences in cold work on brass, and how that affects dispersion and fatigue. There is always more than one way to skin a cat... context matters...
Don't forget to pay equal attention to the ID friction coefficient, and try to avoid over-cleaning the ID so you stay away from adhesive friction (cold welding) issues. That is a different rabbit hole for another day...
If at all possible, work with a mentor who is fully equipped to demonstrate the effects of neck prep and seating forces. Good Luck. YMMV