This may be the wrong place to ask this question but what type press for pistol reloading progressive,single stage or turret? Thanks
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Dillon RL450, Lee carbide pistol Dies and factory crimp die, Lee auto disk powder measure.This may be the wrong place to ask this question but what type press for pistol reloading progressive,single stage or turret? Thanks
Try loading a 1000 rds and see how long it takes you. After I’m done loading with my Dillon 550 I’ll be drinking a beer and watching a game by the time you get to the loading part. If you value your TIME you’ll go with a 550 or the new 750.I have always loaded with a rcbs single stage I was wanting a turret press just don’t know 5he difference and is it worth it over the single stage. I can’t justify the progressive .
You can use any dies, but the Dillon dies are intended for progressive use and “float” slightly to help align the brass and keep things running smoothly. After running a 650 with both Dillon (9mm and .40) and Lee (.45acp) pistol dies, I plan to buy Dillon dies to replace my Lee dies. The machine runs so much smoother with them and I don’t dent brass like will occasionally happen with my Lee dies.Any 9mm dies?
I shoot a lot at times I’ll never load enough to put justify the Dillion I load May rifles in a single stage now
I believe you'll find the Dillon 550/650 the most popular progressive presses for handgun. It wouldn't take much research to prove this. This is from someone who has been shooting USPSA since it was IPSC.?
You seemed like you were waffling so more food for thought if you haven't decided. Turret saves a little time on die setup, but you're still single staging processes to some degree. Progessive will give you speed. Buy a used 650 or a new 750 which just recently replaced the 650. Make sure you get the case feeder with the small pistol plate. If you buy new you can call dillon and they will hook you up with right parts. If you get a used 650 and it might he sketchy you can always send it back to them for a refurb for not that much. If it is not set for 9mm, you need a caliber conversion kit and dies. Hopefully it has the powder bars. New one can be bought setup for 9mm, but dies are an add on or separate purchase.
If you only want to do just pistol then get the sqaure deal B, but note you have to used Dillon's proprietary dies. If you every see yourself doing rifle in bulk, then go the 650/750 route. One other thing about the B is you have to manually feed case into shell plate, where the 50s can do it by case feeder.
In general since you already reload I assume you have a scale, calipers and tumbler of some sort. You will need at a minimum to either buy Dillon 9mm dies if you go dillon or another mfgs set. I lean toward a carbide 3 die set with taper crimp, not roll crimp for semi auto pistols. The one thing no one has mentioned is a case checker gauge, these are invaluable, for setting up and checking once you load. Nothing like making up 500 rounds and then have to pull them because the sizing was off.
Last thought being save your money and just buy a Dillon. You won't regret it and the prices only keep going up, not to mention they do tend to hold their value fairly well if you take care of them.
Sounds good! I was guessing about 375. I'll have to figure out how to put it in the classifieds.Standard setup, single caliber without powder sensor, primer sensor, looks like $370-400.
that many? even when you have to manually index it and set a new case and bullet with every crank?I started out on a Dillon 550B with the intention to upgrade. Tens upon tens of thousands of rounds later, I am still using my 550B. If you are happy cranking out 300-400 rounds an hour at a moderate pace, the 550 will get the job done.
I've had 650 for years and it is a good machine, but it does seem to get out "calibration" fairly regularly. Mine crushes primers at a rate of about 2-3% and that's not just from military primer pockets. The best I've been able to figure out is that they get turned on edge somehow if my technique varies at all when pulling the handle. Not a huge deal but annoying. I don't have a bullet feed, but do have the case feed and it even gets a case sideways every now and then and just keeps trying to drop case until they start falling on the floor. It's a somewhat annoying machine, but for large volume I find it's worth the hassle. I don't change calibers on it anymore and it seems to stay working longer between malfunctions that require taking it apart and cleaning everything up and re-lubing. I concur that this is why I haven't purchased an autodrive. It's a lot of money and would increase my level of pissed off if it required constant readjustment. For the money I spent on the 650 and the money it has saved me on ammo and time, it's worth it to me, but if the autodrive ran like my 650 it wouldn't be.I loaded pistol on a 550 for a number of years. Got a 650 two years ago and set it up with a bullet feeder. Pretty awesome way of loading. I've considered many times purchasing a 1050 and autodrive. The problem I always run into with that is the regular trouble shooting I have to do on the 650. Sometimes the bullet dropper hangs up and doesn't drop a bullet. Get the occasional bullet upside down, get the occasional swaged PP, get the occasional reduced charge inset brass(or whatever those things are called). As much as I like tweaking that stuff, I'm not sure the level of tweaking required to run an autodrive wouldn't be extremely frustrating
Dillon does have great customer service. They always sent me anything I needed for my 650 on their dime. After a while I felt bad asking them to send stuff after a while since most of the stuff that breaks and needs replacing seems like it is just normal wear and tear for a machine like the 650. I have a local store that carries parts so I have just started buying parts. That said, the machine doesn't go down as often as it did when I first had it. I highly recommend replacing the part that the plastic indexing piece rides on. That helped my machine tremendously. Here is a video of the part.you will find if you buy dillon,that even if you decide to part ways with it down the road,you can still get 80% plus retail from it.Hard to go wrong with a 650.One can get quite the cadence going on a 550 manual index once you get the shells and bullets placed ergonomically.Before getting my first of 3 650’s i jumped on youtube and saw the difference between a 550 and 650,i knew 650 was where i wanted to be.But once cry once,and top notch CS from dillon.Im sure you can ask any number of dillon owners about their CS.
Dillon does have great customer service. They always sent me anything I needed for my 650 on their dime. After a while I felt bad asking them to send stuff after a while since most of the stuff that breaks and needs replacing seems like it is just normal wear and tear for a machine like the 650. I have a local store that carries parts so I have just started buying parts. That said, the machine doesn't go down as often as it did when I first had it. I highly recommend replacing the part that the plastic indexing piece rides on. That helped my machine tremendously. Here is a video of the part.
That part and their case feed bearing camming pin totally changed the way my 650 runs. It is night and day different in terms of smoothness.
Just got a 450, in used, but working condition. Been using Lee single stage for a while now, but wanted to get in the pistol game. Maybe I could hit you with a PM sometime for some setup pointers?Dillon RL450, Lee carbide pistol Dies and factory crimp die, Lee auto disk powder measure.
Used a Lee Classic Turret for like 9 years. Works very well, but I wanted to up the volume.
Absolutely!Just got a 450, in used, but working condition. Been using Lee single stage for a while now, but wanted to get in the pistol game. Maybe I could hit you with a PM sometime for some setup pointers?