dero338, best thing to start with is the brass you will be using. Measure up the belt. It varies quite a bit from brand to brand/lot to lot.
Also the diameter of the case right in front of that belt. This is very important and likely a couple of thou is enough. On a match style rifle, this area can be "overly" tight cause you are using your prepped cases not off the shelf ammo.
Ideally, you want the reamer to make a 90 deg cut where the belt ends. General shape is a bevel or slope so varying brass will still chamber. Great for the fire and forget shooter but allows the brass to bulge in front of the belt when repeatedly shooting the same case.
Years back, a guy built a very nice F Open rig but decided on the 6.5 Rem mag of all things. Knowing that belt area could be problematic, he went so far as to turn all his belts to the same dimension. Now his custom reamer with tight fitting belt area fit his prepped brass perfectly and he didn't have issues with case bulge.
Way more fuss then most will want to deal with but if you are building a full on rig anyways and have the gear, a few more minutes "truing" up the belts will serve you well. I guess, you could also just turn the belts OFF the case
Then send down the cases to the reamer cutter so they know exactly what you are trying to achieve.
You haven't said what type of bullet you want to use so I would suggest you just leave the throat/leade SAAMI BUT I would get a separate throater. Now you can play with extending the throats later to suit whatever whiz bang slug you want to send.
I played with a few different leade angles and saw exactly NO difference. In discussion, I usually got a nice chuckle.... no matter what angle you may have cut, in a hundred rds, it has burnt away to whatever the flame front desires.
1.5 deg seems to be the most readily available throater leade angle and that is all I use now.
Jerry