I'm in full agreement with Lloyd, (maybe fuller.)
The subject of "consistency" in my cast bullets used to keep me awake at night.
After reading these forums for a couple years this topic would come up periodically.
Among the guys that have been doing this stuff for a long time, (like 20-30 years or more,) a few have actually gone to the trouble to try to find out just how "ugly" cast bullets can be before they're useless.
The answer is always quite surprising but I'll attempt to paraphrase it:
As long as the base is intact and the basic shape is complete its hard to cast bullets that don't give good performance.
You'll have to go to high-velocity and long range, (well over 100 yds,) before the differences begin to matter.
I primarily cast & shoot big-bore handgun & rifle bullets and they can get pretty ugly once you can let yourself relax about it.
I got wind of this a couple years ago and slooowly began to leave in the wrinkled bullets.
Now I don't bother weighing or worrying about wrinkles or much of anything any more.
I did and still do segregate the wrinkled bullets but I do load and shoot them and can't see any difference.
In a batch of 500 bullets I wouldn't blink at a weight-range of 7 or 8 grains, (that's 3.5 to 4 grains on either side of the expected weight.)
Now that I've relaxed about it all, I get a lot more "keepers" in each batch and neither the targets, the game nor the gunz can tell the difference. I sure can't.
Do a little experimenting and you'll begin to relax too.