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Thread: What kind of press is best for me?

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  1. #1
    Graduate
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    What kind of press is best for me?

    considering the choices between hand presses,single stage presses,turret presses and progressive presses, and even the lee loader,
    I find it better to get a idea of what you want to do ( pistol,rifle or both) what comprises a typical loading session, your expected production needs,
    And what type of workflow you want to have.

    the steps you need a press for are the following: ( pistol) depriming and sizing, case mouth flaring (with or without powder charging) and seating/ crimping (although sometimes this is done in 2 separate steps)

    For rifle it is depriming and sizing, seating/crimping (although this can be done in 2 separate steps)

    Priming for both pistol and rifle can be done either on the press or with a hand or bench primer.

    A single stage press requires you to batch process your operations as it ony does one operation at a time, then you swap out the die to do another operation.

    So loading would be depriming/sizing, repriming then putting in loading blocks, changing die to flaring case mouth if pistol, charging case with powder, changing die to seating die and then seating or seating/crimping.

    A turret press still does one operation on the case at a time, but all the dies are present so they don't have to be swapped out. You can load like on a single stage, or you can do 1 step, then rotate the turret to the next step, then to the other steps required and load a complete round.
    The advantages are less brass handling and die swaps. Some turret presses are auto indexed and rotate the turret to the next position, others are not.
    Usually 3-4 pulls on the press handle for a loaded round. I have seen turret presses in 3-7 die position configurations.

    A progressive press has a shellplate with 3-5 positions for dies.so you are doing multiple operations at the same time on the brass.
    When the shellplate is full it deprimes/sizes in one station, primes and charges the case with powder in another station and seats or seats and crimps in another station. A pull of the handle gives a loaded round,
    Some progressive presses index to the next step, others must be manually advanced.

    So it really depends on where you want to end up, control and production wise as what is best for you.

    I loaded a lot of pistol and rifle ammo on a lee classic cast turret,
    And I also loaded a lot of pistol ammo on a dillon square deal.
    They both have their place on my bench, but there is a use for a single stage press as well.
    they all make good ammo.

    I saw this thread about someone who loaded on a single stage press and wanted to increase his production, it is worth a look, there is a sub discussion about press deflections that needs to be treated as its own topic though.
    https://thefiringline.com/forums/sho...76#post6486276

    Now if I was trying to size 308 brass shot in a machine gun, Id want a press with enough leverage to handle the job.

    I also found this somewhere else
    http://ultimatereloader.com/2012/01/...tart-off-with/

    worth a read as well, from someone who has single stages and is thinking about a turret press
    https://thefiringline.com/forums/sho...98#post6450198

    Another resource worth reading.
    http://dailycaller.com/2016/01/11/reloading-101-how-to-load-your-own-ammunition/#ixzz4Qn5YW13G


    https://forum.capitalcitygunforum.co...ding-questions
    Last edited by mapper; July 15th, 2017 at 09:41 AM.

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