When you sit down at the bench.........
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When you sit down at the bench.........
How much do you do at a time? The other day, I decapped 500 .45 cases, yesterday I sized and primed 200 cases and loaded 50 rounds. Tonight I am going to load the remaining 150 primed cases.
I generally do 1 or two operations at a time and then stop, ie, decapping and sizing one day prime, powder and load the next.
What is your routine?
I generally do 1 or two operations at a time and then stop, ie, decapping and sizing one day prime, powder and load the next.
What is your routine?
"Water's, wet, The sky is blue. And old Satan Claws, He's out there, and he's just getting stronger." Joe Halenbeck
"So what do we do about it?" Jimmie Dix
"Be prepared, Junior, That's my motto, Be Prepared". Joe Halenbeck
"So what do we do about it?" Jimmie Dix
"Be prepared, Junior, That's my motto, Be Prepared". Joe Halenbeck
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Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
I use a Dillon SDB for my pistol ammo, I can load that 500 rounds in about 2 and 1/2 hours. I use a single stage for rifle ammo only.
Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
Yeah, I am using a single stage
"Water's, wet, The sky is blue. And old Satan Claws, He's out there, and he's just getting stronger." Joe Halenbeck
"So what do we do about it?" Jimmie Dix
"Be prepared, Junior, That's my motto, Be Prepared". Joe Halenbeck
"So what do we do about it?" Jimmie Dix
"Be prepared, Junior, That's my motto, Be Prepared". Joe Halenbeck
Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
I use a Dillon XL650, but I usually only do 200 - 300 at a time. No hurry as I am retired and have the time.
George
George
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Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
I usually sneak in about 100 from start to finish on a single...got to time in when the kids aren't around or awake.
Never pet a burning dog...
Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
Straight wall pistol, 200-500 in a sitting. They get mass cleaned in a tumbled with primers in them. They go straight to the progressive and come out finished.
Rifle goes in 6 stages, clean, decap and size, clean, pocket clean and trim, prime, and then load on the progressive. I'll do 200-300 of one of the steps at a time, usually taking a couple of days to get them back in the ammo carrier to be shot.
Rifle goes in 6 stages, clean, decap and size, clean, pocket clean and trim, prime, and then load on the progressive. I'll do 200-300 of one of the steps at a time, usually taking a couple of days to get them back in the ammo carrier to be shot.
Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
I'm almost certain I posted to this thread already, but maybe I forgot to hit submit before I shut down the computer.
Anyhow, I also have a single stage and have different processes for handgun and rifle loading.
Cleaning is done as a separate process from everything else, generally as soon as I get the brass home from the range.
For handgun rounds, I usually do all of the steps in one sitting - from decapping to the finishing crimp. The most I've done in one sitting is probably 300, that probably took me 4 or 5 hours. If I'm doing workups, then the round count is considerably proportionally lower for the amount of time taken do to the fact that I have to adjust the charge every 5 rounds.
Rifle round case prep is considerably more time and labor-intensive, requiring lubing, resizing/decapping, cleaning, trimming (if needed), then priming. This requires 2 turns in the press along with all the lube application and then cleaning. Because of this, I generally prep rifle cases separately in advance of the remainder of the loading steps. In advance of a big set of workups, I'll prep 100 or 150 cases. If I'm doing 5.56 NATO-pressure loads, I'll prep NATO brass for that batch in advance. I'm not in production mode for .223 yet, as I just started into rifle loading and haven't completely settled on any established loads yet. I figure once I get a plinking load established, I'll churn out 500 rounds or so at a time.
I usually spend somewhere between 2 and 5 hours each time I sit down to reload.
Anyhow, I also have a single stage and have different processes for handgun and rifle loading.
Cleaning is done as a separate process from everything else, generally as soon as I get the brass home from the range.
For handgun rounds, I usually do all of the steps in one sitting - from decapping to the finishing crimp. The most I've done in one sitting is probably 300, that probably took me 4 or 5 hours. If I'm doing workups, then the round count is considerably proportionally lower for the amount of time taken do to the fact that I have to adjust the charge every 5 rounds.
Rifle round case prep is considerably more time and labor-intensive, requiring lubing, resizing/decapping, cleaning, trimming (if needed), then priming. This requires 2 turns in the press along with all the lube application and then cleaning. Because of this, I generally prep rifle cases separately in advance of the remainder of the loading steps. In advance of a big set of workups, I'll prep 100 or 150 cases. If I'm doing 5.56 NATO-pressure loads, I'll prep NATO brass for that batch in advance. I'm not in production mode for .223 yet, as I just started into rifle loading and haven't completely settled on any established loads yet. I figure once I get a plinking load established, I'll churn out 500 rounds or so at a time.
I usually spend somewhere between 2 and 5 hours each time I sit down to reload.
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Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
When I switched from the old "Rock Chucker" to a Dillon 550B I used to stop and weigh the charge in every tenth round just to make sure everything was "on the money". It always was within a tenth of a grain of what I'd set it for so after the first thousand rounds I quit checking every tenth round and now I only check the powder weights every now and then. So far it is still holding within a tenth.
When I get enough brass to make up a tumbler full I do the cleaning which takes two hours. Then the brass goes into the respective "clean brass" boxes until I get the urge to reload a particular caliber.
The reloading is completely put-the-brain-in-stand-by-mode automatic. No TV, no radio, no I-Pod, no mistakes; only the clickity-click of the press. Turn off the rest of the world and all its worry; just pay attention to the press. It's what the Budists call "walking meditation"; no thinking, just doing and it's very relaxing. Better than a "Power Nap"!!
When I get enough brass to make up a tumbler full I do the cleaning which takes two hours. Then the brass goes into the respective "clean brass" boxes until I get the urge to reload a particular caliber.
The reloading is completely put-the-brain-in-stand-by-mode automatic. No TV, no radio, no I-Pod, no mistakes; only the clickity-click of the press. Turn off the rest of the world and all its worry; just pay attention to the press. It's what the Budists call "walking meditation"; no thinking, just doing and it's very relaxing. Better than a "Power Nap"!!

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Wisdom comes from reading the instructions. Experience comes from not reading them!
Wisdom comes from reading the instructions. Experience comes from not reading them!
Re: When you sit down at the bench.........
I have a single stage and do 100-150 at a time. Usually enough for a match + a little extra.
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