Re: Reloading Question
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 280rem.</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Well if your starting fom scratch you might want to look at the Rock Chucker Supreme kit for 319.00 comes with every thing you need but dies.for dies forester,redding.wilson,to name a few are your better match dies and cost about 140.00 to 200.00 a set.and on dies there's nothing wrong with rcbs,hornady and other cheaper dies IM
ther than that a good reloading book shood get you loading some good ammo. </div></div>
What he said. Been using a Rock Chucker for 30 years. It may not be as fast as a progressive, but it is reliable and RCBS stands behind their products. The front part of the Speer manual is an excellent read for reloading.
Don't forget to add case gauges for your calibers, and a caliper of at least 6" capacity. A case trimmer.
You'll find other small tools you need as you progress. Stuff like primer pocket reamers, maybe the Hornady bushing set to measure from bullet ogives to base when seating. Lee factory crimp die if you decide to crimp. The Lee universal deprimer is a great tool, it saves decapping pins. Match micrometer seating dies like Redding seat from the ogive for consistent depth.
You may need a primer pocket swage if you use military brass with crimped primers. A Dillon pocket swage is expensive but worth it, but the RCBS tool works.
You'll find all sorts of little stuff you may need. It's great fun to produce your ammo that's more accurate than factory, tailored for your guns, and cheaper to boot.
Brass prep is the only real chore, at least to me. It's also the most important part for consistency and I labor at it.
Oh, and a stuck case puller for when you stick the first case in the die. It will happen. It saves frustration, time, and maybe a die.