I have a new barrel that I'll be having chambered in .260rem. I'll mostly be using R-P 260 brass, but also have lots of .308 brass that I might end up trying later down the road. Will I need to neck turn my .308 brass to avoid chambering issues?
What should be the chamber dimensions (neck area ) to have a .260rem no-neck chamber(~.2970?)?
How much potential accuracy is given up between a tight neck chamber, requiring neck turning and a No-neck turn chamber?
Can I have my .260 chambered with a short throat and still shoot 140's without losing much case capacity?
Should I bother to send 2-3 pieces of brass to my gunsmith so he can use it to measure headspace when chambering my new barrel (use it as a go guage)? I'd use my Redding body die to FL-size my new unfired brass, I'd put a 3 to 5 thou shim under the lock ring so that the base of the body die doesn't quite hit the shell holder to allow me to turn down the body die later to bump the shoulder enough for easy chambering. Should I bother?
I want the best accuracy I can get, but most importantly I need a rig that is reliable and trouble free. Waiting for your suggestions.

What should be the chamber dimensions (neck area ) to have a .260rem no-neck chamber(~.2970?)?
How much potential accuracy is given up between a tight neck chamber, requiring neck turning and a No-neck turn chamber?
Can I have my .260 chambered with a short throat and still shoot 140's without losing much case capacity?
Should I bother to send 2-3 pieces of brass to my gunsmith so he can use it to measure headspace when chambering my new barrel (use it as a go guage)? I'd use my Redding body die to FL-size my new unfired brass, I'd put a 3 to 5 thou shim under the lock ring so that the base of the body die doesn't quite hit the shell holder to allow me to turn down the body die later to bump the shoulder enough for easy chambering. Should I bother?
I want the best accuracy I can get, but most importantly I need a rig that is reliable and trouble free. Waiting for your suggestions.