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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
What is acceptable variance in length?
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<blockquote data-quote="rooster721" data-source="post: 869381" data-attributes="member: 40654"><p>I have a bench source Mike. It's far from free. </p><p></p><p>The cases I shoot, generally speaking, are toast after sizing 4 times.. and I load for three particular rifles like that. So to a guy like me, a few dollars for a proper annealing unit is worth the cost. If I can squeeze a few additional loads out of my brass, PLUS gain in the accuracy/uniformity department, it's money well spent.. and if you want to look at it this way.. in the case of even ONE extra re-load outta my brass, by annealing, in time it will pay for itself* Think about that for one second.</p><p></p><p>There ARE costs to everything, but when those costs are "positive costs" spent to work in your favor and SAVE you money in the long-haul, tell me how they aren't worth it..? To each his own I guess.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rooster721, post: 869381, member: 40654"] I have a bench source Mike. It's far from free. The cases I shoot, generally speaking, are toast after sizing 4 times.. and I load for three particular rifles like that. So to a guy like me, a few dollars for a proper annealing unit is worth the cost. If I can squeeze a few additional loads out of my brass, PLUS gain in the accuracy/uniformity department, it's money well spent.. and if you want to look at it this way.. in the case of even ONE extra re-load outta my brass, by annealing, in time it will pay for itself* Think about that for one second. There ARE costs to everything, but when those costs are "positive costs" spent to work in your favor and SAVE you money in the long-haul, tell me how they aren't worth it..? To each his own I guess. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
What is acceptable variance in length?
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