smak_daddy said:
have you noticed if crimping hurts accuracy at all?
get ready for a deluge of opinions on that subject.
Cannelure or not, the Lee Factory Crimp Die is supposed to "make its own groove". However, in my limited experience, it can negatively affect bullet hold overall in hard/poorly tensile brass. A correction for this is use soft brass or anneal the harder brass.
The reason they recommend crimping for autoloaders is the fact that when the bolt picks up the round, there is a chance that the bullet will sink into the cartridge during the sudden forward motion. When the bolt shoves the cartridge into the chamber, the momentum could cause the bullet to seep out of the case mouth, or worse, contact the rifling or even worse, leave the case entirely
Crimp advocates will tell you that the crimp will increase bullet hold in the neck (which in proper conditions is likely true), and the bullet will start to travel forwards at a more uniform pressure. This would in theory lead to better accuracy.
I don't know what true no-crimp advocates would tell you, because the only ones I have ever met don't really know why they do not crimp, they just don't
I only use bolt actions for what I reload for, so I crimp with my crappy brass (annealed), and I don't for my softer high-quality brass. Either way, accuracy seems good but I am not trying to put every one in the same hole

For hunting, or any application where I am not feeding the cartridge with velvet gloves, I would crimp.
But as I said, I am no expert. So far my reloads have been satisfactory, and I have been confident that they were safe.