My PC response is "if you change a variable, start at 10% of max and work your way up."
My real world experience response is crimping has ALMOST no measurable effect on pressure unless you act a fool with it and actually deform the projectile. Of course I don't burn the barn doors down with any of reloads unless I'm going to be shooting 500+ yards or I'm loading .357. My semi-auto pistol and AR loads are mild.
At any rate, to the OP, I put a pretty firm crimp on AR .223 rounds because I'm afraid of set back during chambering. Reloading data isn't separated by crimp/no crimp because it honestly doesn't make a difference. I will say, however, that the standard advice is to start at 10% max load and work up. No real reason to want max load AR plinking rounds anyway. Work it up until you hit the accuracy sweet spot and roll on with it.