I decided to pick up a Dillon 550 to load in volume for pistol and gas gun use. My goal is to make consistently good ammo without going overboard into the OCD precision realm. I also am not a corner cutter. I’ve been trying to perform my due diligence on setup etc. and it seems as though to process your brass in a reasonably quality oriented manner, you’d almost have to bifurcate the brass operations from the cartridge loadIng ops. I’ve sern many use two different tool heads which seems logical. The part I’m getting hung up on is when/ how to case trim with the Dillon. I’ve got a Redding hand crank trimmer for my single stage processes, but this would be massively inefficient for bulk ammo production. Could you help me understand how best to accomplish the following in a Dillon 550? Seems like it’s almost a single stage operation and not that much more efficient.
“TOOL HEAD 1”
1. Decap.
2. Tumble.
3. Swage primer pockets.
4. Anneal
5. FL sizing.
6. run through mandrel
7. Trim
“TOOL HEAD 2”
1. Prime.
2. Powder.
3. Seat.
4. Crimp
Is there anything I’m missing?
thank you
“TOOL HEAD 1”
1. Decap.
2. Tumble.
3. Swage primer pockets.
4. Anneal
5. FL sizing.
6. run through mandrel
7. Trim
“TOOL HEAD 2”
1. Prime.
2. Powder.
3. Seat.
4. Crimp
Is there anything I’m missing?
thank you