Far from it

- just started shooting about a year ago! If I can make ammo as good as Federal Gold Medal, I'd be very happy because I've been getting excellent results with it.
Is brass sorted for factory match?
I was told by someone who has been involved in the Fed GM program that there is no special anything when they make that ammo.
Massed produced but with better bullets. No special brass prep whatsoever. Was really surprised to hear this.
I too firmly believe that weighing brass is a huge waste of time and could make your brass WORSE.
Consistent case capacity is the goal with the ASSUMPTION that weight indicates that. It most certainly does not. There is enough variation in the extractor groove machining to make a case heavy or light.
I don't think you will see much change in your group size because of that.
However, you can have identical case weight WITH variations in the case capacity due to this variation in extractor groove machining. That can pose problems.
If you want to measure case capacity, measure case capacity. I use Win 680 which is a super fine ball powder. I only compare fireformed cases that haven't been sized so the dead primer is still in the case. Pistol/SG powder would work well too as it compacts very nicely.
Annealing and consistent neck ductility is absolutely critical for maintaining good LR accuracy and minimizing vertical dispersion. that is where the work is and some really neat tools are available to help us lazy souls.
Then there is the powder charge. I have found that the closer I make the charges identical the better. I do not recommend any powder drop for precision LR reloading. There is simply way too much variations in the drops.
The best in the business hold extruded powder to +/- 0.2gr. That is a 0.4gr spread from highest to lowest. In a 6BR, you will be way off tune.
In my 6.5 Mystic which holds 47.5grs of powder, I hold to the same tenth. In my 223, I hold to 0.05gr or roughly 2 kernels of Varget.
The further you go, the more this matters.
Jerry