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Reloading Basics for the Novice
There were some recent questions on the forum about getting into reloading. I found this article on SkilledSurvival.com, and thought I would pass it along.
The article is well written, with a lot of basic information on the concept. Of course... it's written by and for "preppers", so you have to expect the phrases like "When the SHTF, bullets will be the new coin of the realm"... etc. That said, I found the article informative, and it may be valuable to anyone thinking about reloading as a hobby. Just remember, even though "they" say you will save money by reloading... it's simply not true. IF you start reloading, I promise you... you'll just shoot more. you'll shoot cheaper, but more. Enjoy the article! Da http://www.skilledsurvival.com/how-t...content=aweber
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COTEP: CBOB578 DW CCO SIG GSR 1911 SA Micro Compact and a spectacular cast of others! "You have never lived, until you have almost died. And for those who fight for it, life has a flavor that the protected will never know." Guy de Maupassant, 1893. Anonymously, penned on a sign at a command post at Khe Sanh, RVN. |
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Great article padre, thanks for posting.
Powder goes in the shell right? Is that before or after you seat the primer? One thing I learned about reloading is do you homework regarding presses. While it's suggested that newcomers learn the process on a single stage, which is what the late Dave Waits and other members here shared with me, but my philosophy is always been "work smart, not hard". And for me, that is just not the case regarding single stages. It was said that on a single stage, you will go slower and not make as many mistakes. Really? How many squibs did I have my first batch? I know, that was MY FAULT, I FORGOT THE POWDER. Had I been using a progressive press like a Dillon with a low powder alarm set up or another progressive type press with a powder drop, I wouldn't have missed those 3 cases would I? On a single stage, it takes me roughly 1 hr to make 100 rounds of finished ammo, because you do everything in a "single step", 5 times - Decap or deprime & resize, flare, hand prime, fill with powder, seat & crimp. Even a manually indexing progressive press is faster as there are no die changes and you can set them up to run like a progressive, except you index it manually. Not counting the cost of components, but only taking into account what my time is worth, for me it's cheaper to go buy 100 rounds of either 9mm or 45 ACP, even at my local sporting goods store or LGS, tax included! I know reloading is not about speed and can be thought of as therapeutic, but I've seriously lost interest in reloading because I cannot stand the time it takes. Call me young and impatient, whatever. I just feel there's better ways to spend my time. I dropped a decent amount of coin to get the complete single stage set up and someday, it'll get sold and I'll spend even more money for a progressive that I should've bought in the first place. This is why I say you need to do your homework and think about what your needs are. If you're a casual shooter that only needs a fair amount for the month or a hunter that needs even less, but wants more accurately loaded ammo, a single stage is just fine. But if you're into a lot of range time, training or competition, a progressive press is the only way to go. Remember, this is just my 0.02. YMMV. Good day. |
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Awwww... and I was writing one up for the forum.....
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There are no dangerous weapons; there are only dangerous men. To speak without thinking is to shoot without aiming. |
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Good read, you will not save money reloading. You WILL shoot more and spend money on stuff to reload with that you don't need so make sure you are well prepared and know what you really need and what is a luxury in the process. Example would be bullet feeder, case feeder maybe, fancy scale when a beam scale will do the job very well. I dropped $100 in a digital caliper, its fancy and is great but a traditional dial will do the job just as well. You get the idea, point it do your home work, is spot on with this point.
Once you buy your set up it will take maybe years to start getting ahead for reloading if you go all out. But so worth it!
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Post it any way. Articles are good but first hand writings from members are more valuable.
As far as the costs yes for just 9mm or .45 ACP it may take a while to recoup costs but my 38-40 loads cost under $4/50. Midway now sells a box at $40 and when I started loading 38-40 it was $106/50. Then I jumped into 300 BLK when it was $45/20. Believe me that press paid for itself quickly.
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CBOB0746 NRA Life Member Florida CWL Since 1992 Last edited by Gatorade; 12-13-2016 at 03:22 PM. |
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Please post one. Those of us on the fence are always looking for additional resources and points of view.
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I use a Lee 4 hole turret press. I remove the ratchet so it does not auto advance, and load in batches. I prime off the press, so it's resize 50, then prime on a hand primer, then expand those, then load them with a Little Dandy powder measure, then seat and crimp in separate steps. Once my dies are set in a turret, I don't have to change them unless I go to a different bullet profile. Changing calibers is a snap....just snap the .45 turret out, snap a new turret in...dies are already set
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NRA Life Member Wilson Combat CQB Kimber Tactical Pro II S&W J-Frame .38 ect " I don't own the clothes I'm wearin', and the road goes on forever " There's a gator in the bushes, and it's calling my name... COTEP #523 |
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-BH Member: Florida Carry, COTEP 766, SAF, NRA-Life Member FFL 03, NRA CRSO & CI: P-R-S-PPITH Former USAF NCO 1980-1984, DoD 1987-2022 (now retired) "Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind." -- Circa 1938, author unknown "It ain't dying I'm talking about, it's living." -- Gus McCrae "The ultimate result of shielding men from folly is to fill the world with fools." -- H. Spencer |
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