How is the process of an inline seater die with K&M arbor press slower than my redding comp seater die in my area 419 press? Looks to be about the same time for each?
It's not slower - I actually find it to be a little quicker. Think about what's happening when you seat with a standard press during seating:
- You put the bullet on the charged case and put it in the shell holder on the press - how well is it lined up?
- You take this big handle pull it all the way down so the ram can go all the way up into the seating die.
- The bullet engages the seating stem and gets pushed in.
- You push the handle all the way back up so the ram can move everything all the way back down.
- You pull the finished round out of the shell holder.
So you have all that movement to do what? Move a bullet less than half an inch.
Now, let's look at what happens with an arbor press:
- You put the bullet on the charged case, put it inside the inline seater and set it under the arbor.
- You pull the much shorter arbor press handle until it engages the seater (if you've set everything correctly, it's less than about 1/2 an inch) then push it down another sub-1/2 inch
- Release the handle, pick up the seater and let the finished round slide out.
Benefits of an arbor press:
- Less movement = more efficient
- Less opportunity for error
- You can measure your seating forces so you can improve your process
I consider getting an arbor press to be one of the best additions to my reloading process I've ever done. The jury is out as to whether it produces better ammo than a high-quality seating die - but that's not why it's so important - it's the information it yields.