Questions for you experienced reloaders: Fired brass grows on diameter to fill the cylinder bore with a little spring back. Resizing shrinks the case diameter back to spec and grows the length of the brass. Resizing also restores the inside diameter at the neck to hold the bullet. This resizing does thin the wall of the brass.
Assuming you use this brass in only one revolver, would you be better to only resize the neck for the length of your bullet seat and reduce the amount of resizing working the brass for the rest of the case? Or is the resultant step caused by just neck sizing more detrimental?
And I wonder if there is any accuracy gain by have the outside diameter of the case closer matched to the cylinder bore diameter?
Assuming you use this brass in only one revolver, would you be better to only resize the neck for the length of your bullet seat and reduce the amount of resizing working the brass for the rest of the case? Or is the resultant step caused by just neck sizing more detrimental?
And I wonder if there is any accuracy gain by have the outside diameter of the case closer matched to the cylinder bore diameter?