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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Exeter
    Posts
    35,866
    Budget end is Lee, Lymann/Hornady/RCBS are better quality.
    as I only load .22 Hornet to start I bought a Lee hand press kit, Lee powder scales & Lee collet dies.

    Within 6 months I've upgraded to a 3 turret press, Hornady dies (& now RCBS for K Hornet) & a better quality RCBS beam scales.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    Inverness, Highlands, God's own country.
    Posts
    10,067
    Get the best press you can get hold of; best set of scales you can get hold of, then get all the other bits as required.

    I've got 3 turret presses and & single station.

    On the budget side I'd suggest a Lee Classic cast turret press; easy to keep one set up ready for instant use; if you're looking to load just the two calibres, then something along the lines of a nice six station turret (eg. Lyman T-Mag2 .) will do that easily; you can then leave everything permanently set up. (I do for 223 &308.)

    I use Lee Auto prime tools for off press priming and home-made kinetic bullet puller, primer pocket cleaners & loading blocks.
    Pistol & Rifle Shooting in the Highlands with Strathpeffer Rifle & Pistol Club. <StrathRPC at yahoo.com> or google it.
    No longer Pumpin Oil but still Passin Gas!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Lancaster
    Posts
    314
    I bought the Lee Kit plus a couple of extra dies for my Hornet and have found it perfectly adequate - though I wouldn't like to have to load 500 at a time !

    Total cost was less than £150.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    sunderland "north east"
    Posts
    6,433
    Get your self a lee anniversary kit then just add the dies of your choice one thing is to get some better scales than the ones that comes with the kit lyman ones are easy to set up and use at around £50 new and £100 for the kit die sets about £25-£30 per set or you can always look for second hand stuff depends on how much of a hurry you need ammo

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Rotherham
    Posts
    1,456

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Location
    Shoeburyness
    Posts
    330
    I started reloading last year and did a LOT of reading before I spent out buying stuff I didn't really need or have a use for. Some people here were constructive and offered helpful suggestions and advice, and others were just determined to prove what absolute tossers they were (one particular person comes to mind).

    Most folks reload because of a combination of three things.... improved accuracy over factory rounds, cost saving, and ammunition availability (or lack thereof).

    Unless you burn through a LOT of ammunition by the time you have invested in the equipment you are unlikely to save much coin in the overall scheme of things. HOWEVER in years working in aviation I can say for sure that if you buy budget gear it will cost you more in the long run. Buy once and buy right, and you often don't have to buy a second time.

    Some folks swear by Lee as although it is at the cheap end of the market it does do what it is meant to do, just perhaps not always quite as efficiently as the other makes in many respects, but I went down the route of sourcing the RCBS Rock Chucker Supreme Single Stage Master Reloading Kit from the fleabay.COM (not .CO.UK) which after postage and import duty was still cheaper than it could be sourced over here. It includes a GOOD single stage press, and the gear to prime, lube, throw powder charges, a reasonable balance scale, and a few other basics. to get started on top of this kit you will need calibre specific dies, the correct size shell holder, a method of case cleaning (tumbler or ultrasound bath), and a method of case trimming. Other nice to have items are primer pocket swagers and a flash hole deburring tool.

    All this cost adds up and it doesn't all come cheap BUT almost all of it you will only have to buy once. Eventually you will break even on the cost and then start saving a little money on each round, but don't expect that for at least the first couple of thousand rounds!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Rotherham
    Posts
    1,456
    Would make no seen to get RCBS if your hunting mate will cost you about £350
    just for the press, trust me it will not be worth it for just hunting with, may only shoot 100
    rounds a year. I been using a Lee Turret press for 5 years now, loading 308win, 357mag and
    45-70 on it and its spot on. never put foot wrong, I would say though that the lee scale is not very
    good, bit slow to use. and I now people that been using Lee stuff for 30 years and there
    ok with it.

    Up to you

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Exeter
    Posts
    35,866
    I also have a Lee turret press, but use RCBS dies in it
    All the press does is provide the "mechanical advantage" to the process

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