Well, I got it dropping good, but three cavities are a bit larger than the others.
All were .357 x .358 (129.0gr)
Now, three are .359 (129.5gr)
and the other three are .360 (130.3gr)
I've never increased the size before by spinning a bullet.
they'll size to .357 just fine and will be fine for shooting in auto-pistol, but learned a lesson that the spinning can be overdone.
It's a long story why I over-did the spinning, the short version is, Using the dental picks to scrape out the lead deposits made some scratches (I thought I was careful, but with a loupe, the scratches are easy to see), and I tried to remove the scratches with 'extra' spinning. The stickiest cavities were in the middle, so those three got more scratches and subsequently got more spinning. BTW, the scratches are still visible and luckily they don't transfer to the bullet.
Note to self, I 'should' have cleaned the mold with solvent after the spinning, as the polishing compound I used must have some wax? I'd assume the solvent would remove most of the wax, where as, the dish soap/hot water/tooth brush must not have? I was casting wrinkles, even on frosty bullets, for a couple hundred pours, before the wrinkles disappeared. Just glad that the mold drops 'em easy again.