Well I thought I would toss together a small hooptie on what I think so far of the Lee Reloading press and the 2 companies I have been purchasing my reloading equipment from
www.midwayusa.com
www.ammodepot.com
Firstly, Midwayusa.com, Excellent customer service and very nice tracking/shipping setup. and GREAT prices (I think) At the first time I ordered on 12/10/07 they were out of stock of the Lee anniversary breech lock kit so I ordered it from www.ammodepot.com
Ammodepot.com: Alright these folks appear to be pretty decent. I got my tumbler from there I paid $51 including media and shipping. So when I heard that Midway was out of stock of the breech lock kits..I placed an order with this company. The customer service sucks, You can send an email and their system will automatically send a response saying "We cant answer emails in a timely manner so this may take forever to hear from us" Well I waited about a week and I kind of figured surely its in the mail on its way to my happy arms.. But I emailed them to find out... that they had not sent it because they were "awaiting my response on whether or not I wanted a die set for $5 more." An email which I never received neither in my inbox or junk mail folder... So I was pissed that they held up my order awaiting a response on whether I wanted to buy something else that I didn't want to buy from them earlier? To me that is just illogical.. Its a good deal on the dies.. but give me a break why hold a mans order up all week for something like this? So for their customer service a definite thumbs down they have no phone number only an Email and Fax.
Now the goods!
(My only reloading experience is been these past few days).. and lots of reading for a week or so
Lee hand press,
Lee carbide 4 die set 9mm
Frankfort arsenal bullet puller
I was very apprehensive about buying the lee hand press some people said they are a PITA to use for anything. Im starting out just loading 9mm and will work my way up to other calibers, I read that the hand press can handle the job of small straight wall pistol applications and even full case sizing of rifle rounds with a little more effort. So basically without my breech lock kit I cant completely reload... (I dont have the prime on the press kit, and powder scales or measures) But I can do everything except charge and prime..
Decapping/sizing
I have thus far performed this operation on 1,650 cases)
E-Z money.. not hard at all I read that since I have carbide dies I need not lube cases However I tried 2 different lubing methods
1. Diluting a whole 2oz tube of lee lube with 16oz of rubbing alcohol in a spray bottle and shake shake shake.
2.Hornady One shot
For both lubes I put 100 cases into a baggie and gave a quick spray and shook it up & allowed to dry... Both seem to work equally as well... The Lee stuff dries to a white film.. and the Hornady seems not to leave any residue behind. Both methods reduce the already minimal effort needed to deprime/size the small 9mm cases.
--Remember at the moment I have to skip Priming and Charging--
Belling the case mouth
What a straightforward process I must say that the instructions that come with the lee die set and with the hand press are more than adequate.
(Performed on 400 cases)
Seating the bullet
Easy again.. I Marked the knob on mine to easily identify my turns on the depth adjustment and the die itself.. I am using Winchester 115 gr. FMJ bullets so I am seating the bullets to about 1.155" (The same as WWB 115Gr. ammo)
Factory crimp post size die..
Its another follow-the-instructions quick setup deal
So Ive loaded (Dry) 100 rounds..and pulled them back apart again with the impact bullet puller. I checked all my rounds' overall length and they are all well within the max Oal specified and I guess by immersion the whole process has proven to be quite simple..Granted My only training thus far has been the lee instructions and countless hours of reading various how to tutorials on the internet.
I can honestly say for anyone "thinking" about getting into reloading.. Go do it.. It is really something that adds immense depth to the shooting experience.. Plus it is cheaper than factory ammo,
For me I am going to be able to load my first 1000 rounds for about 10.8 Cents per round.. (Excluding cost of reloading equipment)
What a great new hobby
www.midwayusa.com
www.ammodepot.com
Firstly, Midwayusa.com, Excellent customer service and very nice tracking/shipping setup. and GREAT prices (I think) At the first time I ordered on 12/10/07 they were out of stock of the Lee anniversary breech lock kit so I ordered it from www.ammodepot.com
Ammodepot.com: Alright these folks appear to be pretty decent. I got my tumbler from there I paid $51 including media and shipping. So when I heard that Midway was out of stock of the breech lock kits..I placed an order with this company. The customer service sucks, You can send an email and their system will automatically send a response saying "We cant answer emails in a timely manner so this may take forever to hear from us" Well I waited about a week and I kind of figured surely its in the mail on its way to my happy arms.. But I emailed them to find out... that they had not sent it because they were "awaiting my response on whether or not I wanted a die set for $5 more." An email which I never received neither in my inbox or junk mail folder... So I was pissed that they held up my order awaiting a response on whether I wanted to buy something else that I didn't want to buy from them earlier? To me that is just illogical.. Its a good deal on the dies.. but give me a break why hold a mans order up all week for something like this? So for their customer service a definite thumbs down they have no phone number only an Email and Fax.
Now the goods!
(My only reloading experience is been these past few days).. and lots of reading for a week or so
Lee hand press,
Lee carbide 4 die set 9mm
Frankfort arsenal bullet puller
I was very apprehensive about buying the lee hand press some people said they are a PITA to use for anything. Im starting out just loading 9mm and will work my way up to other calibers, I read that the hand press can handle the job of small straight wall pistol applications and even full case sizing of rifle rounds with a little more effort. So basically without my breech lock kit I cant completely reload... (I dont have the prime on the press kit, and powder scales or measures) But I can do everything except charge and prime..
Decapping/sizing
E-Z money.. not hard at all I read that since I have carbide dies I need not lube cases However I tried 2 different lubing methods
1. Diluting a whole 2oz tube of lee lube with 16oz of rubbing alcohol in a spray bottle and shake shake shake.
2.Hornady One shot
For both lubes I put 100 cases into a baggie and gave a quick spray and shook it up & allowed to dry... Both seem to work equally as well... The Lee stuff dries to a white film.. and the Hornady seems not to leave any residue behind. Both methods reduce the already minimal effort needed to deprime/size the small 9mm cases.
--Remember at the moment I have to skip Priming and Charging--
Belling the case mouth
What a straightforward process I must say that the instructions that come with the lee die set and with the hand press are more than adequate.
(Performed on 400 cases)
Seating the bullet
Easy again.. I Marked the knob on mine to easily identify my turns on the depth adjustment and the die itself.. I am using Winchester 115 gr. FMJ bullets so I am seating the bullets to about 1.155" (The same as WWB 115Gr. ammo)
Factory crimp post size die..
Its another follow-the-instructions quick setup deal
So Ive loaded (Dry) 100 rounds..and pulled them back apart again with the impact bullet puller. I checked all my rounds' overall length and they are all well within the max Oal specified and I guess by immersion the whole process has proven to be quite simple..Granted My only training thus far has been the lee instructions and countless hours of reading various how to tutorials on the internet.
I can honestly say for anyone "thinking" about getting into reloading.. Go do it.. It is really something that adds immense depth to the shooting experience.. Plus it is cheaper than factory ammo,
For me I am going to be able to load my first 1000 rounds for about 10.8 Cents per round.. (Excluding cost of reloading equipment)
What a great new hobby