whats up guys. ive been wanting to get into reloading for a while now. any and all advise would be appreciated
I have had a Dillon press for several years and have enjoyed reloading with it. Dillon also has videos on U-Tube you can watch to see how the machine works. Give Dillon a look !whats up guys. ive been wanting to get into reloading for a while now. any and all advise would be appreciated
Would like to hear from the experienced guys but I would THINK, this is the wrong way to go, no?Don't do too much too fast. Pick one cartridge and work on everything before you start branching out.
I'm new also. 223 & 308 both seem pretty idiot proof and would be hard to blow yourself up with as long as primers are seated right.
Would like to hear from the experienced guys but I would THINK, this is the wrong way to go, no?
So if you're going to get into reloading, shouldn't it be for less common, less available/cost prohibitive rounds?
Thoughts?
I didn't mean to make it sound as if you were doing something wrong. At least that was not my intention. Also wasn't trying to suggest you couldn't save money, or I guess make better use of it would be a better way to put it.For .223 you can load 77gr match ammo for about the price of brass range ammo, that stuff is well over a buck a round when buying factory ammo.
The only things I reload is 223 and 308, and they do seem pretty idiot proof, I didn't want to comment on a round I didn't reload.
My main advice is to pick one round and get all the kinks out of your system, before you branch out into others, and I do think that's good advice.
Would like to hear from the experienced guys but I would THINK, this is the wrong way to go, no?
So if you're going to get into reloading, shouldn't it be for less common, less available/cost prohibitive rounds?
Thoughts?
I didn't mean to make it sound as if you were doing something wrong. At least that was not my intention. Also wasn't trying to suggest you couldn't save money, or I guess make better use of it would be a better way to put it.
Just seems to me (in my ignorance) it might be a better use of that investment for rarer rounds. Like I dunno, historical junk. Or maybe if you shoot 7mm08 and that's expensive in your area. You just neck down .308 and boom, you got your rounds...
Again I'm asking questions like this because I don't know what I don't know about reloading, ya know?
whats up guys. ive been wanting to get into reloading for a while now. any and all advise would be appreciated