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I thought I already answered this but maybe it was not recieved.

Neck turning? Necessary? If the chamber is loose, maybe not. If the chamber is NOT loose, then yes. Without turning necks the accuracy I get is not good enough for the caliber's intended uses. It also makes for very short brass life as the pressures are inconsistent and often high, it also makes for difficult chambering and unfired cartridge extraction.

 So, if you like to fight to get an unfired round out of the chamber, like when you get back to the truck after hunting, if you like the occasional primer loose in the trigger group, or you like mediocre accuracy, or you like to use the formed brass 1 time, then run them as formed.

 The round is a good one, just shot my first coyote of the season yesterday with mine, tiny entrance hole, no exit hole. Dead coyote. Sure, you can't shoot them in the guts or lower leg or in the hind quarter and expect them to drop, but hit where you are supposed to and there will be no problems.


 If neck turning is too much effort, go with a 17 remington.


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