New Reloader

Willie IV

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Mar 6, 2019
Messages
154
Thinking of getting into the reloading game. Will load for 6CM & 7PRC. I have nothing at this point so need it all, but I do have primers, cases, bullets and powder. Budget to start is $1000. Tell me what to buy! I've read where people who buy kits end up parting them out to buy singular items that may be better than what's in a kit. I'd rather buy once...cry once. Maybe $1000 isn't enough??? Help me out. Thanks!

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I consider myself pretty amateur still, but have been reloading for a few years now. I normally am a "buy once cry once type of guy", but I went with a cheap kit from Lee. I have still been able to reload very good ammo with pretty cheap equipment. I wouldn't let a 1000 dollar budget limit you. Just get started with what you can afford. You will learn a lot as you go. As you begin upgrading, most things will be for more efficiency rather than ammo quality. I would recommend an annealer though. I went with the ugly annealer. This made the biggest improvement in my ammo hands down over all other things I've bought. I'm going to jump up to a zero press now. But thats only because I want to not cuz I need to.
 
Like most, I started with a cheap Lee kit. That was like 25 years ago or somesuch. I still use a surprising number of Lee tools/equipment, and if you grabbed one of those kits, I expect you'd have the same experience. If you do, get the kit that comes with the Classic Cast press, not the cheaper aluminum one.

That said, here's what I would be buying for replacements for my single-stage loading if I lost everything in a fire today:

Calipers: Non-digital/dial only. I have both Lyman and Hornady, both work fine. I presume other non-digital calipers will too.

Priming Tool: Frankford Arsenal Hand Primer (a nice solid steel version of the old Lee hand priming tool that broke on me after 20 years or so of hard use).

Sizing Dies: Forster Benchrest FL sizing dies and Lee Collet's for neck sizing.

Seating Dies: I just use a Frankford Arsenal Universal seating die for everything.

Case Trimmer: Frankford Arsenal Universal trimmer for everything.

Press: RCBS RockChucker Supreme press

Scale: That cheap Lee one is what I've always used.

Powder Dispensers: Lee Perfect, works great for stick powder (others do not), and probably a RCBS Uniflow for ball powder (the Lee gums up with ball powder) but most steel/aluminum body powder dumpers should work good for ball powder.

Shell Holders - I can't tell any are better than others.

And that should get you well on the road.
 
You can make it as complicated as you want. But you honestly dont need all that much to start out.

RCBS kit isnt a bad way to do it. Though you could snag a CoAX press, scale/priming tool of your choice, some dies and be rolling. Buy the rest as the need arises
 
Also, if you're chasing serious precision (vs just chasing saving money on cost per round or getting consistent ammo), before you spend a pile of money on tools to do various jobs, you might look up Austin Buschman's reloading interviews on precisionrifleblog (he's one of the top PRS shooters in the world). It's pretty eye opening the things the doesn't care about (or doesn't care much about), vs what he cares a lot about (eg: per him, case trimming, seating depth, primer pocket cleaning, neck tension, super-clean brass, none of that matters all that much, as long as it's consistent and reasonable). Dude even still runs a Lee Turret press, of all things.
 
The starter kits will get you going, but you'll quickly learn that many of the basic items will end up getting replaced over time for convenience if you plan to load and shoot a fair amount. With a $1,000 budget, I would piece my kit together and invest in the best I could from the start.

- Pretty much any single stage press will work (stay away or read reviews on Frankford Arsenal), my RCBS Rock Chucker works fine, but I'll probably upgrade to the MEC Marksman.
- Hornady Custom Grade dies are cheap and have worked as well or better than others for me.
- Auto chargers are convenient, I still double check precision charges and trickle on a decent beam scale.
- Universal hand primer.
- Motorized case prep station - chamfer, deburr, nylon neck brush (game changer).
- Case trimmer.
- Mitutoyo calipers, just get good ones from the start.
- Hornady or Sinclair headspace/bump gauges with bullet inserts.
- Tumbler/media separator, FA works fine. I use homemade lanolin alcohol lube and tumble in white rice.
- Case block and powder funnel.
 
The only kit I've looked at has been the Lyman Ultimate kit. It looked like the most complete of the kits I've seen so far.

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I kind of see it like buying a four wheeler if you’ve never driven one. It’s hard to know what you like and don’t like until you have some seat time.

Some things add speed to the process like 3-in-one electrically powered trimmers, spray lube, or tumblers. Other things are more expensive based on how they feel in the hand, like a Redding cast iron trickler vs all the rest, or machined aluminum case holder trays or powder funnels vs poorly designed plastic ones.

How the press handle feels can drive you nuts if it’s extra effort without a return, like buying an extra heavy duty press with a long handle for lots of leverage, for just simple basic reloading. I like a big press for heavy duty stuff like case forming and a medium weight press for everything else.

Everyone likes a gadget of some kind, but I’d stay away from them until you understand the process and know what it will or won’t do for you. Kind of like buying mechanic tools before you know what they are good for.

The basic press kits from any of the major brands will easily reload down to 1/2 MOA in an accurate rifle with standard dies, beam scale, medium price brass and just good standard reloading practices without anything fancy.

I have some Lyman, some RCBS, some Redding, some Sinclair, some Wilson, some Hornady and some small company parts, but started with a run of the mill RCBS Rock Chucker press kit and standard RCBS dies. Older RCBS dies seem to be better made than the new stuff. Hornady stuff has a lot of features, but lower in quality than Redding. Lyman is good for the most part.
 
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