The Accurate Reloading Forums
Good reloading kit?
06 January 2003, 18:12
<glock20rocks>Good reloading kit?
At present, I do not reload, and know very little about it. However, thanks to the (very cool!) people on this forum, I'll be getting a .458 Win. Mag. soon, and that's just a bit to costly to shoot w/o reloading, so...time to take the plunge!
I probably won't be doing much high-volume reloading, but don't want it snail-slow either
All I need it to be able to load the big-bore rifle rounds, starting with the .458 and going up from there (.458 Lott, .577 NE/T-Rex & .600 NE seem likely "next steps"). It'd be extra-helpful if I could also load big-bore handgun rounds like the .50AE, .454 Casull, and .475 Linebaugh...it'd certainly save a lot of $ for those stupid things...
I've been looking at the Hornady Lock-N-Load (always have like Hornady for some reason), but I'm not sure if it'll do the big-bore rifle rounds...
Any suggestions?
(man, this is a lot longer than I thought it'd be...sorry if I put anyone to sleep who tried to read this!)
06 January 2003, 18:16
ShondorPI'm still partial to the RCBS Rockchucker.....can load for many a year, and still be glad you bought it. Load anything you want, and won't overload the press.
SP
06 January 2003, 19:57
ricciardelliThe RCBS Rock Chucker Master Reloading Kit and the RCBS Accessory Kit.
RCBS master kit, I load from my .22 hornet through to my .585 Nyati on it (with appropriate bushing from CH4).
07 January 2003, 00:53
ConPC,
Did you get your CH4 dies from a local supplier or order them from the States? If local, who stocks them? Thanks...
Con
07 January 2003, 07:10
<glock20rocks>RCBS Rock Chucker Master kit it is then!! Thanks for input everyone!
07 January 2003, 07:22
HcliffGood Choice
I love my Rock chucker
You might want a couple of manuals to add to that. (Hornady, Lee, Nosler,etc.) I like the Hornady for directions for new starters.
Hcliff
07 January 2003, 07:46
OldFartYou can't go wrong with the rockchucker. RCBS will take care of you.
08 January 2003, 07:33
reloader-1I would also suggest the RCBS Rock Chucker,
but I would wait a couple weeks(or slightly
more) before buying, because RCBS will phase
out the Rock Chucker this month, and replace
it (for the same price) with a new press, the Rock Chucker Supreme, which is slightly beefier and taller for Magnum reloading. It will replace the original Rock Chucker in the Master Reloading
Kit by the end of the month. I think it is worth the wait...
reloader-1
08 January 2003, 16:01
<glock20rocks>Thanks for the heads up reloader-1; I was going to wait a bit anyway; Midways out-of-stock at the moment!
09 January 2003, 12:27
Harleyglock20rocks,
I too am in the RCBS camp - love my kit. But I did go with Redding Competition Bushing dies. An important component!!
One other minor suggestion - since you said you are new to reloading - Sinclear International has a book called Precision Reloading and Shooting which is one of the best books I have read. It have great detail and insight. Would like to know what others think.
[ 01-09-2003, 03:32: Message edited by: Harley ]13 January 2003, 06:58
Harleyglock20rocks
what did you decide?
18 January 2003, 06:30
reloader-1I just got the 2003 RCBS Catalog, and the new Rock Chucker Supreme looks like one of the toughest presses I have seen yet. RCBS didn't just stretch it, they ironed out all the corners, beefed it up, added a left/right handle, and added a new(!) primer catcher design. Looks like a SWEET press ...
reloader-1
18 January 2003, 06:52
RogerKIt's a myth that you will save money.
(I can head the howls of protest even at this distance.)
You would, if everything always worked out. I have powder on my shelf that promised to be the end all of powder, but that just didn't cut it. That powder cost money. I have bullets, bought and tried and found wanting after a few rounds. I estimate I have around $200.00 to $300.00 dollars worth of inventory that I don't have a use for, all of it stuff that wouldn't work.
I'll get all kinds of arguments on this, but there if one argument that can't be overcome: I enjoy the hell out of reloading and shooting, and because of that, I reload a lot and shoot a lot and that costs money.
Don't go in thinking you will save money. You won't. But if you like to tinker, welcome aboard.
PS: I've had nothing but RCBS equipment and have not had one complaint.
18 January 2003, 07:34
reloader-1I just took a second look at the description, and I realized that the Supreme Kit will be CHEAPER than the old Kit. RCBS no longer includes the Case Trimmer, Primer tubes, or the primer flip tray. Instead, they added the hand priming tool that RCBS makes... So it should be $10 cheaper than the old one at Midway or Natchez!
reloader-1