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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Reloading Bench Set-Ups
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<blockquote data-quote="iShoot17" data-source="post: 1802102" data-attributes="member: 33670"><p>An idea to utilize the space better is T-track. I have it on my bench and it is incredible for utilization. I have all presses mounted to their own plates and can move how I need. I left about a 1.5 foot space on the bench that presses can be shifted around. When I need a specific one, I can push all other presses away, center the press I need in the left open space, then work away. If I don't need any presses and am working on something else (trimmer, swagger, etc.), I just push all presses to one side, quickly mount the item I need in the t-track, use it, then remove and store. I wasn't happy with the size of my bench and the current restrictions, but this has made it work out perfectly for my needs. (I do someday look forward to a longer bench, but I'll likely still use a t-track concept instead of hard mounting presses!)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="iShoot17, post: 1802102, member: 33670"] An idea to utilize the space better is T-track. I have it on my bench and it is incredible for utilization. I have all presses mounted to their own plates and can move how I need. I left about a 1.5 foot space on the bench that presses can be shifted around. When I need a specific one, I can push all other presses away, center the press I need in the left open space, then work away. If I don’t need any presses and am working on something else (trimmer, swagger, etc.), I just push all presses to one side, quickly mount the item I need in the t-track, use it, then remove and store. I wasn’t happy with the size of my bench and the current restrictions, but this has made it work out perfectly for my needs. (I do someday look forward to a longer bench, but I’ll likely still use a t-track concept instead of hard mounting presses!) [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Reloading Bench Set-Ups
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