OK, we are talking AMERICAN MADE brass here...
There has been very little difference between manufacturers for years,
The difference was with military (5.56 NATO) brass early on, 5.56 used slightly thicker case walls, which reduced volume SLIGHTLY.
Military used 'Hotter' ball powder, pressures/vocities were comparable.
Since ATK/Federal took over the Lake City ammunition plant from Winchester/Olin,
And since the HUGE homeland security contract that caused shortages,
In 2012 ATK got the military standards changed to EXACTLY the same as .223
No case wall thickness difference or weight difference...
Which SCREWED those of us sorting military/civilian cases by weight!
The zinc/copper/tin/trace minerals slightly differ from manufacturer to manufacturer, and weight changes SLIGHTLY, but the cases are as close to the same as anything mass produced can be.
If you have much older military cases, or imported cases, its a crap shoot...
Most of the time, if you recognize the head stamp, you won't be able to tell the difference between cases.
The ATK/Federal military cases really took a step up in terms of the brass composition. The old Winchester/Olin cases weren't the best for reloading, too much tin,
But the newer military cases polish up, anneal, form just like upper quality civilian cases do.
It wasn't Winchester/Olin's fault, until the second wars in the Middle East the government simply wouldn't allow them to upgrade, change the brass formula.