Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Wheres-Waldo

Gunny Sergeant
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Minuteman
Nov 2, 2008
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Ive been cranking out ammo on my circa 1980 RCBS RS single stage for about 6 years. It has been my first and only press since I got into this hobby, and while I do love her dearly, I like high-speed/low-drag just as much as the next guy.

Im going to keep my RS, but also start loading on a turret style press. My main concern is deflection of the turret durring reloading, causing run-out, but as Ive never so much as laid a hand on a turret press, this is only speculation.

Is there anything out there on the same level as, or better than the Redding T-7?
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Sure.
Hollywood Turret press.
When you can find one used they will set you back around a grand. I got mine new for a steal with a few extras accessories and one die for $1,600 or so.
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Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Waldo, if you mean by "Caddylac" the biggest, heaviest, most costly, the T-7 is it, and indeed it's a very good press. But, it's still a conventional turret press (meaning the head is held by a center post); there has to be slack in there or the head couldn't turn! That means there IS more spring in it than any single stage. Deflection/spring in any press is easily gaged with a simple dial indicator held on a magnetic base and the results of such a test would probably shock a lot of cast iron single stage press owners!

Some will choke when they read this but Lee's Classic Turret press has the least amount of real spring of any turret due to the way the loosely held head is retained by a steel ring and three posts. The head easily lifts under light ram pressure until it hits the stop and then it stops - hard. And the auto-indexing head rotation feature easily means faster loading if you wish to use it that way or you can disengage the turner and rotate the head by hand or use it as a single stage. It's really a very good press for much less cost than seems possible!
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Mech, that thing looks more like a car jack than a turret press and judging by that die, I'm sorry to hear about your penis...
Do you have any videos of that thing? I dont see how it could index with that vertical support at the 6 o'clock.

Fuzzball, arent Lee presses pot metal?
I havent watched too many videos on the Lee, but I will give it a look. Ive always concidered Lee a bottom of the barrel reloading mfg, but they do have alot of fallowers...
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

That is a support that will keep any possible flex down to 0 when sizing for my .50DTC. It comes off real easy and there really is no flex of any kind when the tower is adjusted right. It is wicked how nice the top moves even with it adjusted tight. It does have four of the small 7/8 holes and also it came with the adapter to the left of that 9mm.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Wheres-Waldo</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Mech, that thing looks more like a car jack than a turret press </div></div>

That is what I said 2 months ago!
If it gets sticky, what do you do, back the lube truck up to it???
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Looks like the cat's butt for big stuff.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

I sold a T-7 with an un-used extra turret and bought a Co-ax.
I wish I had kept the T-7 in case I ever buy a boat. It would have made a great anchor.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Gunsnjeeps</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The T-7 has a suport behind the turret. I haven't seen a problem with a the head moving. </div></div>

I saw the head move every time I dropped the handle on mine.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

fw707, how did the head flex if it has a rear support on it and its captured by the bolt in the middle?

Seeing my press flex while im loading wouldnt give me much of a warm & fuzzy, thats for sure.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Fuzzball</div><div class="ubbcode-body">there has to be slack in there or the head couldn't turn! </div></div>

Fuzzball explained it very well.

I just didn't like the T-7.
When I loaded the head up with dies they were so close together I had to take out 3 to make an adjustment on one. I had dies loosen up occasionally, and I had to take out the dies on either side to tighten up the loose one.
My collet-type bullet puller wouldn't work because the handle would hit the other dies, so I had to take out a couple of dies to pull bullets.
And I didn't like seeing the head move every time I dropped the handle.
I bought an extra head and an allen head socket to change it with, but I didn't keep the press long enough to see how much of a chore it would be to change the entire head assembly to use just one die.
The spent primer system worked pretty well. It caught about 90% of the primers. The rest ended up in the floor.
The primer seater was a pain to change from one size to the other. I tried it a couple of times and went back to a hand primer.

I'm not trying to bash the T-7. Lots of folks use them and love them. It's just not for me. I've got lots of other Redding stuff and it's all great.

I had 2 happy days with the press...the day I bought it, and the day I sold it.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Carter Mayfield</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Harrell's Tooling Turret Press... or is that more the Rolex of turret presses? </div></div>

I have two of these, and they are great. Runout is not a problem with 'em at all...
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

I have a T-7, and love it. I don't see flex, and my runout is the same as when run a rock chucker. I see more runout difference between the different brands of seater dies than the press.

Not to sound condescending, but are you sure you put the turret on right? Ball bearing, spring, sleave and bolt?
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Im willing to narrow it down between the T7 and the Harrells.

The Harrells doesnt look like it has anything over the T7, but the T7 looks like it has a longer throw to it, and could handle a longer cartridge.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Consider a Forster Co-Ax, it's not a turret press but die changes are fast and easy, and the Co-Ax has more mechanical advantage than the T7/Harrels/Rockchucker style press, no holders needed, floating die and shell plate means straight ammo
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: fw707</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I had 2 happy days with the press...the day I bought it, and the day I sold it. </div></div>

Those are a boat owners 2 favorite days, too. I use a collet puller on my RCBS. I've been told that cam pullers work on the T7, but my RCBS is on the other end of the table.
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<span style="font-style: italic">Fuzzball, arent Lee presses pot metal?... Ive always concidered Lee a bottom of the barrel reloading mfg, but they do have alot of fallowers..."</span>

Well, Waldo, it matters a good bit what you term 'pot metal' but a lot of people do make that claim. What they really are is a very high grade alum alloy which is, pound for pound, stronger and MUCH more rigid than cast iron. If that's 'pot metal' you really won't much care for any current scope tubes, most rifle's bottom metal and magazines, some very high grade handguns and the ARs, nor auto and marine engine blocks and most of the airplanes flying today. But, in all due respect to them, if you think all that's some pretty good stuff then the dofuses who call that alloy 'pot metal' must be mindlessly full of crap and really don't know what they're talking about. And Lee's Classic Cast and Classic turret presses are iron and steel. ??

I have the highly aclaimed 'rigid' Rock Chucker, a Lyman turret and two of Lee's "Reloader" C frame presses on my bench. I'm a hobbiest 'machinest' as well as gunner/reloader so I do have the right tools to measure press flex (and cartridge concentricity). I've measured the spring of all three single stage presses while FL sizing cases from the same box of .30-06 and using the same dies/shell holder in each press to achieve the same measured shoulder set back. The RC springs almost 3 thou, consistantly. Neither of the supposed tiny and 'weak' pot metal C frame Lee presses moved the dial indicator enough to take a reading! Meaning, within their obvious yield strength limits, the 'pot metal' C presses are MORE rigid than my massive iron press!

I didn't bother measuring the spring/flex on my Lyman turret press, that would surely burn my eyes. But with proper loading methods (aka, 'knowing what the hell I'm doing'), I can load the same quality ammo on all four of my presses so I wonder why so many people credit their press for making 'concentric' cartridges. IME concentricity comes from the dies and cases and skill, not the press. I do find it less <span style="text-decoration: underline">demanding</span> to load well on a truly rigid press but press spring is NOT an automatic limitation, as proven by those who load quite well on turret presses.

Saying the T-7 press has a support on the back of the turret is meaningless; all conventional turret presses have such a support to reduce the head lifting too massively. Lee's turret press is NOT conventional but I haven't had the oportunity to put my dial indicator on one. I would like to tho, because I'd bet it does pretty well.

My experiments with conventional dies by all makers show there is as much variation in the results from dies by the same maker as between makers. I have two 'identical' die sets in green boxes, one is quite good and the other barely meets SAMMI specs. I get similar results from other color boxes. It seems anyone obtaining excellant results with one set of one brand and less good results from another set by a different brand is only seeing the effects of normal manufactoring tolerances, not a predictable difference between the brands.

For chooshing dies, IMHO and on average, there are two brands tied for 'best'; Forster and Redding. ALL others are, on average, tied for third place no matter how much they vary in cost. Even then, on average, there isn't a massive difference. And if we luck onto a third place set in which everything works perfectly - not common - we really can load as accurate/concentric as we could with a much more costly first place set.

(Keep an eye out for my grand-son-in law Cpl. Kirby Morris on base, he's a grunt. And be kind to him if you find him, I'm quite proud of him. He's pulled tuff tours in both Afganistan and Iraq and is looking at moving into the "security force"!)
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

Fuzzball, very intelligent thought out post. What I agree with the most is this:

"IME concentricity comes from the dies and cases and skill, not the press."
 
Re: Cadillac of the Turret Presses?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 427Cobra</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Consider a Forster Co-Ax, it's not a turret press but die changes are fast and easy, and the Co-Ax has more mechanical advantage than the T7/Harrels/Rockchucker style press, no holders needed, floating die and shell plate means straight ammo</div></div>

That's what I use. For a turret, I would get the Harrell's. The Harrell's is very square, which is a concern in that style press. With the Co-Ax design, you needn't be square as the die and shell float so they can find their own centers.

The mechanical advantage of the Co-Ax is an advantage for sizing, but a disadvantage for priming and seating. I don't prime on the Co-Ax. I do that by hand. For seating, you don't have as much "feel" as a typical press. Also, the design of a Redding or Foster seater actually "unfloats" the press with the sleeve that is designed to square the case in the seating die.

Still, I use a Redding competition seater with my Co-Ax. 2/3 of my 308 loads show runout of less than .00075". I still end up with a cartridge or two with .003" runout, but 98% show less than .002", which is good enough for most anything but benchrest.