I am with George
I moved last year and in prep for that I chambered a group of barrels. I also had done some setbacks on several barrels. When I moved and got back to shooting I found that my reamer was worn on the leading edge of the neck. Since I only cut a few thousandths with my finish reamer I believe it was the set back barrels that were just too hard and or had some carbon in the neck area. This caused a pinch on the bullet and they would not shoot well. I studied the problem, had reamers reground to new specs and bought a carbide reamer to do set backs. Before you discount what I say, I drill the chamber with a twist drill, I then drill, the chamber with a special piloted drill made by JGS which includes the neck and the cone I then true the chamber by taper boring the chamber, then ream. Sounds like a lot but it really goes quickly. I only ream maybe .010 on the diameter with the reamer. The finishes are great, and centered. But My reamer did ware right on the end, I now have back up reamers and a carbide.
By the way I am finding more reasons to set back a barrel these days, making a fire forming gun, utilizing barrels for hunting guns or prairie dog rigs, making chamber gauges, more than I use to think about.
Ralph