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Join contestFrom the research I’ve done, neck sizing isn’t recommended by any of the top shooters out there. It’s universally accepted practice to body size and bump the shoulder. You’re doing rightGood deal, in that case I'll just keep doing what I've been doing. Was just curious if neck sizing was something I should or could try in my ar.
Semi auto fired cases typically stretch ( in all sorts of directions ) just from the designed semi auto action, and cyclic speed.
Some S/A actions canbe crazy hard on brass... H&K, M1A's,
Extraction happens while still under substantial pressure.
Yanking the fired cases rim while still under that high pressure all the while the case is still expanded into the chamber walls.
Combine that with typically looser chamber dimensions , for function under less then perfect conditions.
Produces some fairly distorted cases....
And you need easy, smooth, complete , consistent feeding in a S/A.
Lots of S/A fired brass can benefit from "small based" reloading dies to help 100% chambering.
You need the reloaded cases to freely feed and fully , easily chamber, for proper trouble free function.
So neck sizing for a S/A is not something I would try.
If the Op is looking for precision improving "tricks" for a large frame AR, a better quality barrel and good trigger have yielded very good results for me and many others.
There are many more precision tuning tricks as well.
You can neck size for an AR, and expect reliable chambering if you're using cases previously fired in that chamber. The real problem is extraction; it's common for neck sized rounds to be difficult to extract without firing them. There is nothing wrong with trying for yourself though, as long as you keep that in mind. It is not otherwise dangerous or hard on the rifle.
Most of this is irrelevant for an AR, which is what the OP asked about, unless it's severely overgassed and destroying brass.
Civilian AR15 barrels are not "typically chambered loose", in fact a lot of high end barrels have tighter match chambers. That also has nothing to do with neck sizing, as long as brass from that barrel is going back in that barrel it doesn't matter how tight or loose that chamber is. The small base dies comment is completely off base, and doesn't line up with your claim of loose chambers; small base dies are needed for reliability with tight chambers, not loose ones.
It looks like there are a number of comments here from people who've never actually tried this, and only a few comments from people who have.
You can neck size for an AR, and expect reliable chambering if you're using cases previously fired in that chamber. The real problem is extraction; it's common for neck sized rounds to be difficult to extract without firing them. There is nothing wrong with trying for yourself though, as long as you keep that in mind. It is not otherwise dangerous or hard on the rifle.
I should clarify this comment - I'm not saying anyone should neck size for an AR, or any other semi auto. I am saying that it's worth understanding the real reasons not to, rather than just accepting some of the inaccurate guesses that are being posted in this thread like loose chambers, case stretching, etc. At the end of the day, the easy and good method is to just bump shoulders back .002-.004" with a die that produces minimal runout and doesn't size more than necessary (i.e. no small base die unless your barrel actually needs it).
@Yondering have you neck sized only for a specific AR ? And if possible, what were your results ?
I am not trying to be combative at all... just curious.