I have been reloading for a few months for 2 .308's (AAC-SD bolt gun and a DPMS LR-308). Both of these rifles, I have found, shoot best with the 175's, either 118LR or FGMM with the FGMM 168's a close second. I have also found the 130 gr SOST/OTM Barrier (MK319 Mod 0) does very well out to about 700 yds. So I bought some of the 130 gr MK319 pulls (about 500) and 600 118LR/175 SMK pulls to load for the rifles for load work-up. I already have brass (fire-formed from factory FGMM/LC LR/FC), but eventually it will need to be replaced.
I have calculated that it costs me .52 cents per round to hand load NOT including the cost of brass (yet). [.21 cents/rd for powder (@$35/lb locally incl tax), .26 cents/rd for the 175 pulls and .05 cents/rd for BR 2 primers]
When I have to buy brass, I have found once-fired LC (not LR) for .18/rd/1000 (Cleaned, swagged, de-primed) and .27/rd/500 for UNFIRED LC (not LR) which still have the LC primer in them. So if I went that route it would increase my loading cost to .70-.79/rd and reduce some of the labor involved in reloading my own brass (depriming, primer pocket deburring, cleaning, priming again, etc) for at lease ONE firing. Higher grade brass (New Lapua, New Federal, etc) would be a bit more obviously.
To the point: I can get FGMM 175's for $1.22/rd by the case/200 or $1.25/20 by the box. The 130 gr MK319 I can get for around $1.00/rd. So with all the work/time involved in reloading on a single stage press with all hand tools (except depriming/neck-sizing/bullet seating) I am saving about .45/rd on the 175's and .20/rd on the 130's. This, of course doesn't factor the most precious cost of re-loading when you work full time and have a 2.5 yr old...TIME.
I am thinking that my time is worth more than .45 per round..considering I can afford to buy ammo if need be but can't buy anymore time. I think I am going to split the difference unless/until I get into a more expensive caliber such as .260/6.5 CM, etc. I am going to hand load when I have time but not try and produce ALL my own ammo (match and practice) like I am now and buy cases of 175's for $1.22/rd to shoot in matches. Save the handloaded pulls for lots of trigger time at the range.
What is everyone else's cost/benefit ratio when your time is factored into it?
I have calculated that it costs me .52 cents per round to hand load NOT including the cost of brass (yet). [.21 cents/rd for powder (@$35/lb locally incl tax), .26 cents/rd for the 175 pulls and .05 cents/rd for BR 2 primers]
When I have to buy brass, I have found once-fired LC (not LR) for .18/rd/1000 (Cleaned, swagged, de-primed) and .27/rd/500 for UNFIRED LC (not LR) which still have the LC primer in them. So if I went that route it would increase my loading cost to .70-.79/rd and reduce some of the labor involved in reloading my own brass (depriming, primer pocket deburring, cleaning, priming again, etc) for at lease ONE firing. Higher grade brass (New Lapua, New Federal, etc) would be a bit more obviously.
To the point: I can get FGMM 175's for $1.22/rd by the case/200 or $1.25/20 by the box. The 130 gr MK319 I can get for around $1.00/rd. So with all the work/time involved in reloading on a single stage press with all hand tools (except depriming/neck-sizing/bullet seating) I am saving about .45/rd on the 175's and .20/rd on the 130's. This, of course doesn't factor the most precious cost of re-loading when you work full time and have a 2.5 yr old...TIME.
I am thinking that my time is worth more than .45 per round..considering I can afford to buy ammo if need be but can't buy anymore time. I think I am going to split the difference unless/until I get into a more expensive caliber such as .260/6.5 CM, etc. I am going to hand load when I have time but not try and produce ALL my own ammo (match and practice) like I am now and buy cases of 175's for $1.22/rd to shoot in matches. Save the handloaded pulls for lots of trigger time at the range.
What is everyone else's cost/benefit ratio when your time is factored into it?