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Forums
The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Is it worth getting into reloading still?
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<blockquote data-quote="Chaparral" data-source="post: 3690365" data-attributes="member: 49817"><p>I have had a press for over a decade. Did not like it at first. On shelf and not touched. I now have several and find it nice to do something detail oriented that requires some concentration. I do NOT like the tediacy of trimming brass. You will get out what you put in. I make hunting rounds and practice rounds. Bulk on progressive, 20 to 200 on a single stage. I found some of the less expensive products worked better for me but not in most cases. Try to use or observe someone else’s equipment. Learn. Do not be scared of buying used equipment. Heck out used dies very carefully. Half of mine were ancient and still good. When a die is bad everything else goes wrong in my experience.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chaparral, post: 3690365, member: 49817"] I have had a press for over a decade. Did not like it at first. On shelf and not touched. I now have several and find it nice to do something detail oriented that requires some concentration. I do NOT like the tediacy of trimming brass. You will get out what you put in. I make hunting rounds and practice rounds. Bulk on progressive, 20 to 200 on a single stage. I found some of the less expensive products worked better for me but not in most cases. Try to use or observe someone else’s equipment. Learn. Do not be scared of buying used equipment. Heck out used dies very carefully. Half of mine were ancient and still good. When a die is bad everything else goes wrong in my experience. [/QUOTE]
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Is it worth getting into reloading still?
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