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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Should I buy a new press ?
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<blockquote data-quote="19elkhunter51" data-source="post: 1823468" data-attributes="member: 14169"><p>I believe you will be less frustrated by starting with a single stage press. Doing so will allow you to learn the whys and whatnots of reloading in a manner that is a logical progression. </p><p>You CANNOT have too many manuals/reference books when you reload. Read several of the manuals about how to reload and then read them again, BEFORE you ever touch the press or trimmer or vibratory cleaner.</p><p>When you have become proficient with the single stage press, then tackle the progressive press.</p><p>I believe, (my basic two cents worth with some change) that single stage presses shine in building premium, accurate reloads. Not to say that you can't build accurate reloads on a progressive, I just believe they are two different presses for different purposes. One bullet at a time or a whole case in an hour. Not a true apples to apples comparison.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="19elkhunter51, post: 1823468, member: 14169"] I believe you will be less frustrated by starting with a single stage press. Doing so will allow you to learn the whys and whatnots of reloading in a manner that is a logical progression. You CANNOT have too many manuals/reference books when you reload. Read several of the manuals about how to reload and then read them again, BEFORE you ever touch the press or trimmer or vibratory cleaner. When you have become proficient with the single stage press, then tackle the progressive press. I believe, (my basic two cents worth with some change) that single stage presses shine in building premium, accurate reloads. Not to say that you can't build accurate reloads on a progressive, I just believe they are two different presses for different purposes. One bullet at a time or a whole case in an hour. Not a true apples to apples comparison. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Should I buy a new press ?
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