Boyd
I would not call myself a 1000 yard 30 cal. shooter, so if that's who you need to answer your question, then I am not the one. On this forum, I almost wonder if speaking of looser neck clearance is akin to sacrilege.
I am also interested in opinions on this issue of neck clearance as lately I have been running looser rather than tighter on neck clearance and feel the results have been better.
A number of years ago I shot 7mm's at 1000 yards and I was very careful to keep a tighter neck clearance (turned the necks on the brass to be .0025" under the chamber when loaded) but every so often I would see a high shot at 12:00 o'clock, and if so, I would hold aside the brass case and check it out (was there an anomaly I could detect, thickening of the neck metal, donut forming, etc.). I typically never found anything. I just set up a 7mm RSAUM a couple weeks ago for long range shooting and when I used some brass with .0025" neck clearance, again I noticed unexplained vertical now and again. I then turned a batch with .004" neck clearance, the vertical seems to have gone away entirely so I am running with that.
In a .308 Win Palma barrel I have, I have been running .005" neck clearance and have found it working out very well for consistency, yet when I got down under .003" clearance with other brass in the same rifle, things seemed to get finicky and I felt I saw more errant shots and vertical.
Certainly none of what I did would qualify as "scientific testing", but I feel I was never prejudiced by running a little extra neck clearance, but the reverse has not always been true.
Robert