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Thread: Reloading Kit

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by aquarius11 View Post
    i bought a second hand Lee progressive 1000 press, its an older model with only 3 holes in it but i have 3 of the mounting plates, one is fitted with the decap/resize die (as i prefer to decap then polish) and the other 2 with .38 & 357 dies and powder measures, i bought a s/h lee classic cast to reload .308/7.62 again the only thing i bought new was the case trimmer.
    So far i think the Lee products are great for what they are, if you want to go down the precision reloading/shooting shooting then the sky's the limit.
    Good luck and as always just ask on here as the guys are great and helped me loads (no pun intended) when i first started.
    aquarius11
    thanks for the info its the lee classic cast bushing one iam thinking of getting

  2. #2
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    Dont think you could go far wrong with it. Have a look at the link, just add dies, CDSG ltd are good people as well if you want new. atb
    https://www./itm/Lee-50th-Aniversary...UAAOSwfoNaay9E
    One Shot = One Kill

  3. #3
    Parabuteo is offline My Chrony has bought it a couple of times...
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    I have never used a Lee press, reports vary but by and large they seem to do a good job.

    What I would say is to stick with a normal single stage press and a hand primer. I load rounds by the hundred for CSR and still use a single stage Forster press. Sure it takes a bit longer but I handle each case and I KNOW it is properly aligned. Each round is handled and any nasties spotted.

    I know people operating multi stage and automated presses such as the Dillon series and they need a lot of setting up.
    I'm a maggot in another life you know

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Parabuteo View Post
    I have never used a Lee press, reports vary but by and large they seem to do a good job.

    What I would say is to stick with a normal single stage press and a hand primer. I load rounds by the hundred for CSR and still use a single stage Forster press. Sure it takes a bit longer but I handle each case and I KNOW it is properly aligned. Each round is handled and any nasties spotted.

    I know people operating multi stage and automated presses such as the Dillon series and they need a lot of setting up.
    Yip just going to take my time once I start not trying to break any records more interested in safety than amounts lol

  5. #5
    Parabuteo is offline My Chrony has bought it a couple of times...
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    Quote Originally Posted by blueheckle View Post
    Yip just going to take my time once I start not trying to break any records more interested in safety than amounts lol
    Funilly enough a lot of reloading errors are spotted by feel which is much easier with a single stage hand operated press. I did 100 5.56x45 last night which with each charge weighed, primers, seating, crimping and colour coding the anulus (I use a slightly better bullet past 300) took 1.5Hrs.

    "Bimey that bullet/primer seated easilly" etc etc. Wrong bullet, split neck, primer pocket shagged, primer in back to front. Oh look, there's a funny bright ring near the case head....might be time to check your die headspace/bump settings

    The real buggers are only have one powder out at a time so you cant balls that up (We had a lad blow an F class rifle up a while back, the liklihood was that chap who reloaded used to do it on the counter in a shop with all sorts and as likley used pistol powder by mistake, typically for the NRA old boys net it got brushed under a carpet and the bloke had minor burns, a few splinters and soiled armour). I only use N140/RS52 so if I substituted either the load would not be massively different.

    Always check your primers are the right way round (I have seen this done and yes it still fired, but destroyed the firing pin and bolt face needing a new bolt, in a Barnard).

    Always (always) check the case is filled BEFORE you seat a bullet in it. If in doubt, weigh a known loaded round as a reference. One big cause of blown up rifles is a squib round shoving a bullet into the leades and the next round chambering and firing. I had this done to me as a safety supervisor on a recent ADVANCED CSR skills course. Thankfully the shooter could not chamber another round or I would have copped the lot.

    Oh yea, another good trick is to keep good records and stick some old carpet under the bench. It is hard to set a round off by dropping it, but it is less so to set a primer off by crunching it on a concrete floow and easier to find on a dark soft surface...we all know how far he little bastards bounce dont we kids?

    Most of all enjoy it, the results can be both fascinating and rewarding...or frustrating.
    I'm a maggot in another life you know

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Parabuteo View Post
    Funilly enough a lot of reloading errors are spotted by feel which is much easier with a single stage hand operated press. I did 100 5.56x45 last night which with each charge weighed, primers, seating, crimping and colour coding the anulus (I use a slightly better bullet past 300) took 1.5Hrs.

    "Bimey that bullet/primer seated easilly" etc etc. Wrong bullet, split neck, primer pocket shagged, primer in back to front. Oh look, there's a funny bright ring near the case head....might be time to check your die headspace/bump settings

    The real buggers are only have one powder out at a time so you cant balls that up (We had a lad blow an F class rifle up a while back, the liklihood was that chap who reloaded used to do it on the counter in a shop with all sorts and as likley used pistol powder by mistake, typically for the NRA old boys net it got brushed under a carpet and the bloke had minor burns, a few splinters and soiled armour). I only use N140/RS52 so if I substituted either the load would not be massively different.

    Always check your primers are the right way round (I have seen this done and yes it still fired, but destroyed the firing pin and bolt face needing a new bolt, in a Barnard).

    Always (always) check the case is filled BEFORE you seat a bullet in it. If in doubt, weigh a known loaded round as a reference. One big cause of blown up rifles is a squib round shoving a bullet into the leades and the next round chambering and firing. I had this done to me as a safety supervisor on a recent ADVANCED CSR skills course. Thankfully the shooter could not chamber another round or I would have copped the lot.

    Oh yea, another good trick is to keep good records and stick some old carpet under the bench. It is hard to set a round off by dropping it, but it is less so to set a primer off by crunching it on a concrete floow and easier to find on a dark soft surface...we all know how far he little bastards bounce dont we kids?

    Most of all enjoy it, the results can be both fascinating and rewarding...or frustrating.
    many thanks for that

  7. #7
    Parabuteo is offline My Chrony has bought it a couple of times...
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    Quote Originally Posted by blueheckle View Post
    many thanks for that
    No worries....I found a live primer under the bench last night as it goes
    I'm a maggot in another life you know

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