'Boo and Wobbles, you have discovered the other special quality of the collet die that no one ever talks about. At least, not in a good way. Really surprised Lee customer service hasn't thought this one through either.
If you have set up the die properly, applied enough force to cause the collet to squeeze the necks BUT there is no neck tension (not enough to hold the bullets), you have work hardened or thickened necks.
Yes, the collet die can be used to effectively monitor your brass.
I found that out by accident. Great well prepped brass, no problems sizing, nothing changed then all of a sudden after several firings, irratic neck tension with some tight and others loose. Way different feel between cases when sizing and seating bullets.
Checked everything with no obvious problems. Started pushing harder and harder on the Lee die until I too blew the lid off the die. Polished and sanded this and that to no avail. Almost got rid of the dies. Finally, decided to anneal all of the necks...voila, problem went away.
Me likes lots!!!!!!
With most dies, the oversizing is so great that even when the necks start to work harden, the dies still 'work'. However, what shows up is degrading accuracy, neck splits, unexplained flyers, stringing and other real pain in the butt problems.
I can now monitor how my brass is aging with the collet die. I know that once fired, there is a bit of give that can be felt when the brass is sized.
If there isn't any give, the brass necks have thickened. If there is some give but the bullets seat too easily, the necks are starting to work harden so spring back too much. Either problem is bad but can easily be solved. There is no other die that let's you 'feel' this.
When brass is sized properly in the Lee die, seating pressure is very consistent and smooth. Again, any differences felt here, lets you go back and diagnose bad brass.
If you want accuracy at LR, you better be able to know when those necks are starting to vary. That will be the single largest problem for vertical stringing. This is the single biggest problem that you cannot easily monitor.
Now you can...
For me, I turn my dies way down so that the shellholder bottoms on the die 2/3 of down travel on the press arm/lever. I find this gives me more leverage and better feel of the die. You don't need to he-man down on the press arm to make the die work. If you do, check for problems elsewhere...especially in the brass itself.
Jerry