Got a Lee App today.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Glock 40

Problem Solver
Special Hen
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
6,284
Reaction score
9,527
Location
Tulsa
So today my order from Mid-south Finally arrived. I had watched numerous videos and decided to throw down for a LEE APP Deluxe along with APP Primer Pocket Swage kit. Well to start off when I pulled it out of the box and saw it. My first thought was "You don't look like much to me" The little press repeated the famous words of James Dalton and said "Opinions Vary"

upload_2020-4-10_22-8-35.png

upload_2020-4-10_22-16-52.png


So after reading through the instructions that are typical Lee and a bit on the short side. I got it setup along with a Lee Universal Case Feeder and Collator. First impressions its not that big even with automation stuff added to it. I started off with some 223 and it took a bit of tinkering to get it to run right. Part of it was some confusion on setting up the case feeder. Once I got that sorted out. It pretty much eats what you throw at it. It does have the occasional hickup where it drops an extra case.
upload_2020-4-10_22-9-9.png


So first task depriming brass. The swage kit comes with its own depriming die. Its a universal deprimer die but has a special depriming pin. It puts a small flare on the top of the case so the depriming push rod goes in easier. You have to make sure you have it adjusted correctly or it can add more flare than you want. Here is the swage kit depriming pin next to a Lee Universal Depriming pin. Also I noticed now they are selling specialized depriming pins for different calibers.
upload_2020-4-10_21-55-15.png


So first step was to run a few hundred pieces through the swage deprimer. After getting it setup and fine tuned it ran really good. I ran through 40 cases which is what the case feed holds I believe in about a minute depriming. You do have an occasional case that double feeds and flys out. If you shake the coallator it will feed the cases in correctly 98% of the time amazingly. The only thing is it takes a while and is noisey as heck. I found it was easier just to drop cases in the correct way. Even thought it dosen't run flawless its so quick the occasional hickup is okay in my book.

After depriming I set it up to swage. The instructions are kind of a joke. They tell you to apply approximately 25 pounds of pressure. The little press looks like that would snap it but I put the man arm to it. I do most of my reloading sitting down. I found it was easier to swage standing up. The only thing is you can't see the alignment when it has an occasional misalignment. With my Dillon swager I know its swaged and I know its consistent this one from case to case I was really wondering is this thing swaging them. Below are the parts of the swage kit. The bottom is spring loaded and flexes down as you apply pressure. Then spings it back off the swaging pin. Only loading some primers would really tell if it swaged worth a crap. I did 100 or so to check.
upload_2020-4-10_22-3-45.png


The manual says you can resize on the press but recommends not using the express shell holder that lets you use the automation. I said to heck with it. I am gonna try it. I ran 20 or so 223 cases through it no problems with a LEE resizing die.

I ran the others through my 550 to resize. Tossed them in tumbler to clean off lube. Then installed primers with my 550 which can be a B#tch to install primers with that short stroke forward. Results they all went in like butter. I couldn't believe it.

So overall consensus. I am very impressed with this little press. It punched above its weight for sure. The one thing I really don't like is the handle sucks and will rub on your hand. Gonna have to figure out and upgrade on that. Also the quality is no were near Dillon but it costs what a set of Dillon dies costs. I am sure some things will end up breaking the automation part is all plastic. There is no way this tiny plastic hook isn't going to break in time. That little hook is what makes the whole automation happen. Its really a pretty neatly made machine. I just can't see it lasting for years without needing spare parts. Okay thats my long winded review. If you have questions let me know. Tomorrow the boy wants to deprime some 9mm so we shall see how it runs that.
upload_2020-4-10_22-8-55.png
 
Joined
Dec 9, 2008
Messages
87,296
Reaction score
68,860
Location
Ponca City Ok
Nice review! I have a $25 Lee shotshell loader that has loaded I don't know how many thousands of shotshells. Pot metal base, aluminum square tubing for the riser that everything runs up and down on with plastic shot and powder hoppers on top, and it still runs. I use it for short runs of premium shotshells like pheasant loads.
Lee seems to be not as robust as some of the other loaders, but the danged things just hang in there and pump out shells be it metallic or shotshells.

$25 Back in the day when I bought it....
 

Dumpstick

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Dec 11, 2016
Messages
3,207
Reaction score
5,054
Location
Logan county, on a dirt road
Thanks for the review.

I have been on the fence about the Lee APP, and seeing this helps.

One thing about Lee products; they may not be as robust as other makes, but Lee products are as robust as they need to be.

In my experience, Lee products are engineered with materials designed to easily do the work, with a safety factor if perhaps 3x.

Other products seem to be designed to hold up a locomotive while an Orangutan yanks on the lever.

While that's not necessarily a bad thing, having the tools so over-engineered means one is paying for unneeded materials.

If Richard Lee had not been designing and producing reloading tools, in all likelihood reloading would not be as popular as it is today. I would probably have not entered the hobby, at least not in my 20s, when money was tight.

There is much to be said for a tool that does a job well, at a reasonable price.
 

Aries

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Feb 1, 2019
Messages
5,708
Reaction score
8,496
Location
Sapulpa
I have always said, Lee products will last a lifetime while RCBS, Hornady, Lyman will last five lifetimes. But Lee costs half as much.
 

Glock 40

Problem Solver
Special Hen
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
6,284
Reaction score
9,527
Location
Tulsa
Now we need a video.
Okay Made a few videos did all three in about 20 minutes. 40 cases first is depriming. Then change machine to swaging. Then change to resizing. Things to note there are a couple hickups. You will see with Swagging I have to align a couple cases. I have found if you slow down just a bit and let the case settle and stop wobbling you can eliminate that problem mostly. I didn't in this video. Last video is resizing. You will see one case double feed and fall to ground. That happens on occasion usually at beginning of a new tube of shells. This machine could use a little more leverage imo but I am sure Lee calculated what the machine can handle and limited torque that way.

Deprime 223 with Lee Swage Deprimer


Swage 223


Resize 223
 

Glock 40

Problem Solver
Special Hen
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Messages
6,284
Reaction score
9,527
Location
Tulsa
Here is my son doing 9mm first 5 minutes he ran 175 pieces through deprimer. If a case is upside down I would say 3-5 per 100 it wont feed into shell holder so you just flip it and keep going. The Coallater works much better on pistol ammo and quickly fills the tubes.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom