Spoke too soon about never using the smaller pins below 0.2625”: They are really useful for measuring the progression of our beloved donuts in the neck-shoulder area: In brass from once fired Hornady brown box ammo, AMP annealed, not neck turned (1-1.2 thou neck thickness variation), then sized down about 2 thou using a custom Forster FL die with a honed neck ID of 0.2860” (sizing button removed). Then seated a bullet which resized the neck ID to 0.2635 or just a hair below that.
The donut blocks a 0.2620 pin - but it fits with almost no wiggle room in the neck. The 0.2615 pin just barely goes through the donut under slight pressure, and it has some wiggle room in the neck.
So the donut ID is close to 2 thou (likely between 1.8 and 2.2) after just one firing.
Really, so soon?!
If you then run the 0.2635 mandrel through the neck using the P3 mandrel die in the press, it does not resize the neck, but it does resize the donut. Now the 0.2620 pin will easily go through all the way, but the 0.2625 pin will get stuck at the donut. So the donut is 0.5 thou enlarged, and is still close to 1.5 thou smaller than neck ID.
If i put the expander ball assembly back in the Forster FL die, which has a 0.2627” diameter, it does a better job with the donut, and the same 0.2620 pin will fit fairly tightly in the case neck but is quite tight in the donut area, but it does go through with moderate finger pressure. Donut and neck IDs are closer to 0.2-0.3 thou. Maybe just a case of luck.
Or maybe a well made FL die with the correctly sized neck for your chamber, and a correctly sized button does have some advantages?