Back in long ago and far away 1960's and 70's, the only carbide sizing dies for bottle necked cartridges were from a long extinct company named Hollywood. But even carbide dies require the shoulder area to be lubed. Knowing that, I decided to come up with a method to lube is a fast amount if time.
For brass with crimped primers, I do sizing and decapping in a single stage press, and swage the crimps out in a different step. I cleaned in a vibrator with corncob media (about 400 in a batch) for 2 hours. then placed in a metal container (shaped and sized like an Oatmeal can) and put a large squirt of Breakfree CLP. And shook vigorously for 2 or 3 minutes to evenly distribute the CLP. (Do Not Use Tri-Flow, it will foul the primers!) Now days I use wax based spray-on lube like Hornady's "One Shot". I left the thin coating of Breakfree CLP on the cases in 1984, and as of last summer 35 years later not one misfire! Now days I size and deprime, then wet tumble with steel pins, then finish reloading.
Something that else has changed in 35 years; In 1984 the Lyman accuracy load was WW748 and a small Rifle Magnum Primer, Now everybody recommends small standard primers and a little more powder. My old reloads used CCI brand mag primers and shoot 1/4 MOA in good bolt guns. (my 1994 Bushmaster AR loves this load 1/4 to 1/2 MOA, my Mini-14 [2 to 4 MOA] didn't shoot well with anything!)
Many of us have nothing else to do, so may as well reload!
Ivan