With the FL die, it shouldn't hurt you as much during sizing. During seating, it might. On my friend's press, he never could get rid of the 0.003-0.005" runout "flyers" with that kick present. He was using the Competition Neck sizer.
With my old Rock Chucker and the FL die, I still had quite a few 0.0025" flyers with the occasional 0.003". Not bad, but as I said, nothing to brag about. With the Co-Ax, a flyer is 0.0015", with an occasional 0.002". The majority of the rounds are under 0.001" of runout (even better results using the collet die using it in "steps"). This all assumes your brass has uniform neck thickness and is annealed, of course. Once the brass gets hard, everything goes to s**t regardless of which press and die you use.
Look, I'm sure you'll have fine results with the Rock Chucker and quality dies. My point was that the Rock Chucker is not "the best" press out there for precision reloading. I get annoyed when people pump it as the best, especially when they don't measure anything other than the COAL of their rounds.
With my old Rock Chucker and the FL die, I still had quite a few 0.0025" flyers with the occasional 0.003". Not bad, but as I said, nothing to brag about. With the Co-Ax, a flyer is 0.0015", with an occasional 0.002". The majority of the rounds are under 0.001" of runout (even better results using the collet die using it in "steps"). This all assumes your brass has uniform neck thickness and is annealed, of course. Once the brass gets hard, everything goes to s**t regardless of which press and die you use.
Look, I'm sure you'll have fine results with the Rock Chucker and quality dies. My point was that the Rock Chucker is not "the best" press out there for precision reloading. I get annoyed when people pump it as the best, especially when they don't measure anything other than the COAL of their rounds.