Bill,
Military brass is designed to be heavy duty, thicker brass which means less powder capacity, The same amount of powder in a case with less capacity raises pressures as does having tight necks which can cause the bullet to wait longer due to the case neck not being able to expand, for higher pressures in the case before it moves down the barrel. When you size brass down from .308 to .243 the case walls in the neck winds up thicker, the extra material between .308 and .243 is squezed down into the neck walls, which requires a case neck turner be used to put the neck thickness back to specifications.
You are lucky to have had the minor problems you have had. If you use different makes of commercial brass, Remington, Federal, Winchester etc the capacity issue is also there but not as much as with military brass.
A good neck turner is not cheap, you would be better served to discard the brass you have and get ready made .243 brass.