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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Forster co-axial press
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<blockquote data-quote="zoeper" data-source="post: 300954" data-attributes="member: 10682"><p>Thank you all for the replies.</p><p>Win 69 - I was told by a very knowlegable and respected gunnut in local circles - who happens to sell a lot of both these presses - that he would much rather spend the extra$ and upgrade to the co-ax. Main argument being the alignment that is (automatically) controlled by the case and not the press, and that this results in less runout. </p><p>The upgrade would involve:</p><p> </p><p> new press</p><p> new set of redding competition bushing and seating dies</p><p> meaning that i would also have to start doing outside neck turning and would have to invest in those tools as well</p><p> </p><p>for now i would easily fall for the big boss (same style as my current press), but i'm just scared that i might miss out on some "magic"................(i did read in another thread on this forum that there is "no magic" involved)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="zoeper, post: 300954, member: 10682"] Thank you all for the replies. Win 69 - I was told by a very knowlegable and respected gunnut in local circles - who happens to sell a lot of both these presses - that he would much rather spend the extra$ and upgrade to the co-ax. Main argument being the alignment that is (automatically) controlled by the case and not the press, and that this results in less runout. The upgrade would involve: new press new set of redding competition bushing and seating dies meaning that i would also have to start doing outside neck turning and would have to invest in those tools as well for now i would easily fall for the big boss (same style as my current press), but i'm just scared that i might miss out on some "magic"................(i did read in another thread on this forum that there is "no magic" involved) [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Forster co-axial press
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