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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
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<blockquote data-quote="Dr.Tramp" data-source="post: 2124302" data-attributes="member: 117681"><p>I don't shoot high volume and like to take my time and relax when I reload so the RCBS Rock Chucker press and accessories that I've been using for years works perfectly fine. My brother on the other hand prefers and has a couple Dillon rotary presses. Each to their own.</p><p>I live alone and have an extra basement bedroom that I keep my safe and reloading equipment in. I only keep the powder and primers I'm using at the moment in the room and for safety reasons store the bulk of my primers, powder, and ammo in a couple locked cabinets locked to the floor of an enclosed back porch so in case of a fire I can move them away from the house.</p><p>One thing I did add to my equipment a few years ago is a 10lbs rock tumbler that I use along with stainless steel pins to clean my brass. Tumbling the brass with the pins gives much better results than anything else I've used especially if I first deprime the shells so that the primer pockets also get cleaned.</p><p>At the moment reloading components, especially primers, are difficult to find but I've been buying and stashing what I need for years and am in pretty good shape compared to a lot of other folks.</p><p>Ride Safe. Dr.Tramp.....</p><p>PS: I also have three MEC presses for 12, 20, and 410 shotgun reloading. I don't know about now but when I bought them it was cheaper and easier to just get different presses than swapping dies.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dr.Tramp, post: 2124302, member: 117681"] I don't shoot high volume and like to take my time and relax when I reload so the RCBS Rock Chucker press and accessories that I've been using for years works perfectly fine. My brother on the other hand prefers and has a couple Dillon rotary presses. Each to their own. I live alone and have an extra basement bedroom that I keep my safe and reloading equipment in. I only keep the powder and primers I'm using at the moment in the room and for safety reasons store the bulk of my primers, powder, and ammo in a couple locked cabinets locked to the floor of an enclosed back porch so in case of a fire I can move them away from the house. One thing I did add to my equipment a few years ago is a 10lbs rock tumbler that I use along with stainless steel pins to clean my brass. Tumbling the brass with the pins gives much better results than anything else I've used especially if I first deprime the shells so that the primer pockets also get cleaned. At the moment reloading components, especially primers, are difficult to find but I've been buying and stashing what I need for years and am in pretty good shape compared to a lot of other folks. Ride Safe. Dr.Tramp..... PS: I also have three MEC presses for 12, 20, and 410 shotgun reloading. I don't know about now but when I bought them it was cheaper and easier to just get different presses than swapping dies. [/QUOTE]
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