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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Know your chamber
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<blockquote data-quote="MudRunner2005" data-source="post: 1205808" data-attributes="member: 12995"><p>Great post JE! I agree 110%. The internet is a great tool, but once you start really getting into reloading, you start using that manual for comparison a lot more than you thought you would. You find yourself thumbing through it for when you get an idea in your brain. It becomes something you regularly turn-to for answers and helping you form ideas a lot more than you originally anticipated. So, I agree with JE, do yourself a favor and get a hardback print copy reloading manual.</p><p></p><p>Also, once you start spending lots of money on components and other reloading stuff, you also spent $1,500+ on your rifle setup...So, in the grand scheme of things, what is spending another $20-30 on a reloading manual...</p><p></p><p>Reading a book never hurt anybody...But <strong>NOT</strong> reading a reloading manual has hurt plenty of people. So, be smart, and if you're not an experienced wildcatter, or are fairly new to reloading, I suggest sticking by what the manual says.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MudRunner2005, post: 1205808, member: 12995"] Great post JE! I agree 110%. The internet is a great tool, but once you start really getting into reloading, you start using that manual for comparison a lot more than you thought you would. You find yourself thumbing through it for when you get an idea in your brain. It becomes something you regularly turn-to for answers and helping you form ideas a lot more than you originally anticipated. So, I agree with JE, do yourself a favor and get a hardback print copy reloading manual. Also, once you start spending lots of money on components and other reloading stuff, you also spent $1,500+ on your rifle setup...So, in the grand scheme of things, what is spending another $20-30 on a reloading manual... Reading a book never hurt anybody...But [B]NOT[/B] reading a reloading manual has hurt plenty of people. So, be smart, and if you're not an experienced wildcatter, or are fairly new to reloading, I suggest sticking by what the manual says. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Know your chamber
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