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I had a friend bring me over this weekend and show me a bit of his reloading setup.

He had 2 dillions set up for 9mm and 45 acp, both progressive. He explained a bit of load devolpment and then showed me what actually went into making the machine run.

First, it seemed that without a case loader and bullet loader the process was still VERY involved and was a bit less "mindless" than I had invisioned it.

second, he told me by the time he payed for all the materials he told me he was around $6 per box of 50 FMJ rounds. that is a bit more than I somehow pictured it costing.

Now I realize that with reloading you get much more consistant loads, thus allowing much better accuracy. You also have the ability to tailor loads to different situations. However it seems that for someone new to the game, that uses less than 500 rounds per month buying cheap ammo is the way to go (unless accuracy is really required). At least for pistol ammo.

Rifle ammo seems to be a totally different animal, at least in calibers other than 7.62x51 and 5.56x45. Both military cartridges can still be bought at low prices thanks to our "comrades" however when it comes to 25-06, 22-250, it is either reload or get a second job to support the cartridge.

I guess the purpose of this to warn others who are about to start reloading. If you are like I was at one point, and expecting to throw out $500 for a reloading setup then expect to shoot 5 cent rounds you are going to find out there is a lot more work, and a lot more expense than you are expecting.
 

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I don't look at reloading as work. It is part of the shooting game. I cast my own bullets and reload pistol ammo for $2.00 for 50 rounds. Rifle ammo costs $6.60 per 20. A lot less than $25.00 per 20.

I can also cast lead bullets with gas checks and reload HP rifle ammo for $2.60 per 20. If all I am going to do is punch paper out to 200 yards cast rifle ammo would do.

Doug
 

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You can still reap the benefits of reloading by using a single stage press. If you don't shoot more than 500 per month then don't invest a lot in a progressive. Start out with single stage and enjoy the time spent rolling your own.
 

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About how many rounds a month does someone need to be shooting for it to be worth purchasing the equipment and spending the time to reload? I'm mainly talking rounds such as 9mm and .223.

Might be kind of a broad question but I figured it was a good chance to ask.
 

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Do you want to save money or find a rewarding hobby?

The fun is developing new loads that you can't buy anywhere.

I find great satisfaction in developing loads that perform at a high level. My best is .6360 at 200yds. out of my factory .30-06. You can't buy that anywhere!
 

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Hey man if you want to check my set-up out just stop on over my place. I can show you the cheaper side of it, Im not running the high dollar set up he is.
 

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Wait until you get into precision reloading for long range bolt guns...electronic powder scales, electric case trimmer, custom dies, precision measuring devices of every description...

But when you shoot a tiny group out past 600 yards-it is sweet!

I just moved here but have a lot of brown boxes of loading gear to unpack and set up.

Once you learn the basics, the big money expenditures narrows down into 2 distinct groups: One- how much production capacity do you want? How many times do you want to pull the handle for a loaded round.

Two-How much precision do you expect out of your reloads?

There are points of diminishing returns on both ends of the spectrum. After reloading for over 25 years there is still much more to learn. It is a fun and rewarding hobby.
 

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My opinion on reloading is I reload for precision. I load every bullet the best I can make it and it shows in my accuracy achieved. I don't have the best or most expensive loader out there and only use a single stage press. I'm not out to produce 1000 rounds per hour or anything like that. I want every one just like the last one. I have been loading for over 40 years and have enjoyed it a lot.

In my opinion this is a bad time to start reloading because of finding components. Right now you have a hard time getting the stuff you need for reloading. Everything is hard to find. Powder and primers and bullets. Years ago when I started I never had a problem getting anything I wanted at anytime now it's not that way anymore. Now you buy whatever you can when it's available.

As far as saving money reloading yes you can save money especially at todays prices for ammo. You really see the savings on handgun ammo.
 

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Much like tek I have loaded for many years and inthe lst couple years I trust factory ammo less and less know of 3 rifles in the last year alone destroyed by factory ammo
 

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Reloading is half or better of the precision shooting game. Basically, the more you do it the more you learn. The more you learn the bigger PITA it becomes. The problem is, in my particular sport, once you've seen that target come up 600 or 1000 yards down range with that spotter in the pin-wheel center and your scorer hollers "EX"- then on the next shot you see the spotter disappear because you just hit the spotter spindle and blew it through the target -
It's over.

It's crack cocaine with a 2nd amendment theme. LOL
 
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