I love it. It’s a little confusing trying to find your presets because the instruction manuals a little hard to follow but once you figure it out it works flawlessly. You’re supposed to calibrate it every time you use it with the weights that come with it so I feel likes it’s very accurate.
Best thing I've bought in years is the RCBS chargemaster. Speeds me up greatly, especially on Rifle charges because I can be pressing in bullets while the next load dispenses.
Hands down wet tumbling is the cat's meow. I had 2 dry tumblers and sold them both after I finally got the wet one. I haven't loaded anything in about 4 years but I've made up for it this weekend. Tumbled 6.5 creedmoor,6.5 Grendel,308,45 mag,454 Casull, and S&W 500 and dried them in the oven...
I've got a couple of 1 lb cans of H110 powder that I'd like to swap for some 4895 powder.I'm back and forth between Carrollton and Marietta during the work week so let me know if you're interested .Thanks
I started reloading back in the early 80's, mainly to feed my Mac 11.From there I started buying pistols in some off the wall calibers and kept reloading for them as well as hunting rifle loads. Now a days it's pretty tough to beat factory loaded prices on stuff like 9mm and 223 when you figure...
Most of my cases have been shot at least 2 and maybe 3 times before they get where the bolt takes a little effort to close on a bolt gun.Then I know they are getting time to trim them.Never measured it to see what that measurement was though.
I only see one step that you might skip to help you speed up a little.Normally I don't feel the need to check case length on once fired brass. My experience has been that they usually don't stretch enough to harm anything until they've been fired 2 or 3 times.:)