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Feeding the habit
- clovishound
- Drover
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Wed Apr 13, 2016 4:18 pm
- Location: Summerville SC
Re: Feeding the habit
I do understand about the difference between saving money, and shooting more for your money when it comes to reloading. I usually tell people there is no way my daughter and I could shoot as much as we do if it were not for reloading.
There is, I think, humor here which does not translate well from English to sanity. - Sanya
- Rugerfanboy
- Cowhand
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Sun May 08, 2016 10:52 am
Re: Feeding the habit
If you consider how many rounds a Dillon RL550B press will put out in an hour (550 per hour)...you'd have a different view point about the expense. Yes...the press is not cheap. Remember...your buying a progressive press and the Dillon quality that comes with it.clovishound wrote:I've been loading on the LCT for years. I've toyed with the idea of a progressive, but between the expensive of setting up, and the fact that too many things are going on at once for my tastes, I've stuck with the turret.
Nothing wrong with us blue cool-aid drinker's being "Loud and Proud" of our Dillon press. You'd feel the same...if you seen what they can do for the reloader. The bottom line is....your just too cheap to buy one. Sorry...just stating the obvious.clovishound wrote:If I could get around the attitude of the blue folks, I might be able to justify the initial expense of a Dillon. The additional expense and hassles of caliber changeover makes it a non starter for me.



Hassles of caliber changeover...people that don't understand or have the patience to set one up properly makes these kinds of statements online. So, please...STOP spreading false statements like these...!!!

The 550B can used as a single stage press, a turret press and a progressive press. That's a pretty good bang for ones buck...in my opinion.

So...your saying you don't think your daughter will grow in the shooting sport...??? The sport is growing more and more each year. Younger shooters are starting to shoot more at the competitive level than before in history. What's gonna happen when your daughter gets older and see's the cost of ammo and reevaluate her money and decides to start reloading..??clovishound wrote:Clovispup and I shoot about 200 - 250 rounds of centerfire a week on average. I can manage that fairly easily on a turret. I don't see us shooting a lot more than that in the near future. If we were going through more than that, I might change my mind.
[color=#FF0000]Squatch[/color] wrote:I ended up loading 47 of those 300gr torpedoes. I have room in my ammo box for mouse farts and cruise missiles. Each have a job. I like them all!![]()
- clovishound
- Drover
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Wed Apr 13, 2016 4:18 pm
- Location: Summerville SC
Re: Feeding the habit
I have no problem with people being proud of the products they own and like. I am like that with Henrys. The problem I have is when folks put others down for owning other products. I see this attitude with brands such as Apple, Glock, and Dillon. I'm am by no means saying all Dillon owners are obnoxious about it, just that there are enough vocal proponents that have the attitude "My brand or you are an idiot!". They refuse to believe that anyone else makes reloading equipment worth owning. I have seen enough of this attitude that it would make me reluctant to ever buy a blue appliance for my reloading bench.
As to not believing that my daughter will grow in the sport, I hope and think she will. I just don't see the number of rounds we shoot each week growing by a lot, unless she decides to get into some type of serious competition. She has shown little interest in this. I would like to see her try it. I think she is a very good shooter. Some of that may be Dad pride. Then again, I often look at her targets and then look at everyone else's targets on the range.
As to not believing that my daughter will grow in the sport, I hope and think she will. I just don't see the number of rounds we shoot each week growing by a lot, unless she decides to get into some type of serious competition. She has shown little interest in this. I would like to see her try it. I think she is a very good shooter. Some of that may be Dad pride. Then again, I often look at her targets and then look at everyone else's targets on the range.
There is, I think, humor here which does not translate well from English to sanity. - Sanya
Re: Feeding the habit
Those big blue reloading presses? Yes, they are really good. But yes, they are also expensive, and both the company and a few of their customers sometimes seem to have a bit of an attitude. Bottom line, though? They're not for everyone, but if a person needs to load a lot of ammo, you can't beat them.
I use Lee products, and they fit my current needs perfectly. If I needed to churn out thousands of, say, 9mm rounds, I'd get a blue one asap.
I use Lee products, and they fit my current needs perfectly. If I needed to churn out thousands of, say, 9mm rounds, I'd get a blue one asap.
Re: Feeding the habit
I am new at reloading, it took me about two and a half hours to load 50 357mag for my henry big boy. Is this about normal or being new am I really slow at this?
- CT_Shooter
- Administrator emeritus
- Posts: 5451
- Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2016 8:42 am
- Location: Connecticut
Re: Feeding the habit
I use a Lee Single Stage Press with dies that have been fitted with Lee bushings, making it quick to change from one die to the next. I can reload 50 in 30 to 45 minutes using the Lee Perfect Powder measure. If I use a dipper to measure the powder (which I do for H110), it takes me about 45 minutes to an hour to do fifty. But, I prime all of my cases as part of the cleaning/sizing process, so priming doesn't factor into my reloading times.larry7293 wrote:I am new at reloading, it took me about two and a half hours to load 50 357mag for my henry big boy. Is this about normal or being new am I really slow at this?
Also, when I'm reloading, there are NO distractions; no music, no phone calls, no visitors -- NO distractions.
H006M Big Boy Brass .357 - H001 Classic .22LR - Uberti / Taylors & Co. SmokeWagon .357 5.5" - Uberti / Taylors & Co. RanchHand .22LR 5.5"
- clovishound
- Drover
- Posts: 2354
- Joined: Wed Apr 13, 2016 4:18 pm
- Location: Summerville SC
Re: Feeding the habit
That is a little slow, but that's OK. Do it right and worry about the speed later.larry7293 wrote:I am new at reloading, it took me about two and a half hours to load 50 357mag for my henry big boy. Is this about normal or being new am I really slow at this?
Actually, if that was your first attempt at reloading, and you had to set up your dies, and work out the bugs, that's not too bad.
Everybody moves at a different speed. You will find the pace that is a good compromise between speed and accuracy. I tend to err on the side of accuracy.
There is, I think, humor here which does not translate well from English to sanity. - Sanya
Re: Feeding the habit
Larry, don't be in a hurry. You will get faster with practice and experience, but safety, accuracy and precision should be your goals.
- Rugerfanboy
- Cowhand
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Sun May 08, 2016 10:52 am
Re: Feeding the habit
Slow is not always bad. Being that your a new reloader, you don't have any muscle memory and your probably checking everything as you go from one step to the next. You also don't have the feel yet when operating your press. In time....you will be more productive at reloading. Give yourself some time to develop a routine and some muscle memory. But...always remember....Safety Is Paramount in reloading. If you sideline safety....eventually you'll pay for your mistake and that might include a friend getting hurt standing next to you at the range shooting when your reloads cause an issue. Be safe and enjoy your new hobby...!!!larry7293 wrote:I am new at reloading, it took me about two and a half hours to load 50 357mag for my henry big boy. Is this about normal or being new am I really slow at this?
[color=#FF0000]Squatch[/color] wrote:I ended up loading 47 of those 300gr torpedoes. I have room in my ammo box for mouse farts and cruise missiles. Each have a job. I like them all!![]()
- Rugerfanboy
- Cowhand
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Sun May 08, 2016 10:52 am
Re: Feeding the habit
Good thought out response....I really like that...!!!clovishound wrote:I have no problem with people being proud of the products they own and like. I am like that with Henrys. The problem I have is when folks put others down for owning other products. I see this attitude with brands such as Apple, Glock, and Dillon. I'm am by no means saying all Dillon owners are obnoxious about it, just that there are enough vocal proponents that have the attitude "My brand or you are an idiot!". They refuse to believe that anyone else makes reloading equipment worth owning. I have seen enough of this attitude that it would make me reluctant to ever buy a blue appliance for my reloading bench.
As to not believing that my daughter will grow in the sport, I hope and think she will. I just don't see the number of rounds we shoot each week growing by a lot, unless she decides to get into some type of serious competition. She has shown little interest in this. I would like to see her try it. I think she is a very good shooter. Some of that may be Dad pride. Then again, I often look at her targets and then look at everyone else's targets on the range.
[color=#FF0000]Squatch[/color] wrote:I ended up loading 47 of those 300gr torpedoes. I have room in my ammo box for mouse farts and cruise missiles. Each have a job. I like them all!![]()