Re: neck turning and it's issues
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: MALLARD</div><div class="ubbcode-body">i've been told you shouldn't inside neck ream for any reason (though i think if your making donuts that would be one reason , or forming brass)
you should only turn your necks if your using a tight neck chamber that requires it.
turning cases for chambers that dont require them typically produces "worse" accuracy, ( according to several tests i did on my little pressure trace machine). I would guess the extra expansion for turned cases is a bad thing, enough to overshadow any coincentric gains
Unless you had the chamber/reamer made to be that tight , chances are you shouldnt be neck turning for that gun.
but if your chamber is tight , I believe its best to turn your cases on the same mandrel you expanded them on and you can get a donut if you don't turn your cases all the way down to the shoulder.
hope that helps </div></div>
I think in general you are correct. However...
I had a 243WSSM once. The brass consistency was horrible in nearly every aspect! The rifle reflected this. The worse pieces had 2.5 thou difference from one side of the neck to the other. Neck turning changed a 2.75 MOA gun to a 1.5 MOA gun. Of course it then caused to much neck expansion, thus a split neck here and there. At least I didn't feel I was shooting a shotgun anymore