The Accurate Reloading Forums
Want to buy - .358 Norma Finish Chambering Reamer
31 December 2016, 22:59
loud-n-boomerWant to buy - .358 Norma Finish Chambering Reamer
I want to buy a .358 Norma finish chambering Reamer, and figured that some of you might not check the classified, but would look here. PM me if you have one that you want to part with.
Thanks.
Dave
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know. - Groucho Marx
31 December 2016, 23:47
capowardquote:
Originally posted by loud-n-boomer:
I want to buy a .358 Norma finish chambering Reamer, and figured that some of you might not check the classified, but would look here. PM me if you have one that you want to part with.
Thanks.
Dave
Why not rent the finish reamer and gauges?
http://www.4-dproducts.com/dis...wid=210&tname=rental Jim
"Life's hard; it's harder if you're stupid"
John Wayne 01 January 2017, 01:17
dpcdOr, consider this, which is why I no longer rent reamers.
You will pay at least $60 for the reamer rental; remember you have to pay shipping and insurance both ways. That is a sunk cost. If you just buy the reamer, they cost $140. So, you essentially bought one you can keep for $80. It will always be worth at least eighty bucks to someone else.
01 January 2017, 02:06
H47I'm with dpcd. The rental is a sunk cost. Once you send it back it's gone.
As far as buying used, there can be pitfalls there too. Not that anyone here would sell such a thing, but I once had a customer who bought a reamer on ebay. It was, of course, a "deal." Until I looked it over and it was so nicked up from rolling around on someone's bench with the crescent wrenches and scrap steel that it had to go back for a regrind... $75 plus postage. Deal gone!
Buy new, pay once, and keep it for the next job too. Or sell it for 80 bux.
A good job is sometimes just a series of expertly fixed fark-ups.
Let's see.... is it 20 years experience or is it 1 years experience 20 times?
And I will have you know that I am not an old fart. I am a curmudgeon. A curmudgeon is an old fart with an extensive vocabulary and a really bad attitude.
01 January 2017, 02:38
Duane Wiebe (CG&R)Other side of the coin...bought a 350 Rem Mag reamer about 25 yrs ago....now THAT's a sunk cost
01 January 2017, 03:40
loud-n-boomerI would rather purchase since I am likely to use the reamer twice, but not at the same time.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know. - Groucho Marx
01 January 2017, 04:34
Bill Leeperquote:
Originally posted by Duane Wiebe (CG&R):
Other side of the coin...bought a 350 Rem Mag reamer about 25 yrs ago....now THAT's a sunk cost
Mine was the 358 STA and somehow, I ended up with two of them. Then there's the 338/378 Weatherby. These are, by the way, available at bargain prices. Regards, Bill
01 January 2017, 06:08
dpcdOf course if you ever plan on using the reamer more than once, than it is a no brainer, cost/benefit ratio, wise.
01 January 2017, 07:51
speerchucker30x378.
I finally got mad and sold all of my one off reamers (about 100 of them). Most had only been used once. Now if a customer wants a wildcat or a reamer I know I won't use again I make him pay for the reamer and if required the gauge. Then I give them to the customer after I'm done with them. In your case, I would simply buy a new reamer. The hassle of ordering it and shipping it back isn't worth the $80 you might save. You can always sell it for $80 on ebay if the money means that much to you.
When I was a kid. I had the stick. I had the rock. And I had the mud puddle. I am as adept with them today, as I was back then. Lets see today's kids say that about their IPods, IPads and XBoxes in 45 years!
Rod Henrickson