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What are your reloading quirks.

Dimner

I do believe in Captain Crunch.
So I notice sometimes that I make the same errors over an over again in the reloading room. Well, not really errors, but quirks that make me roll my eyes.

What are some of your oddball quirks? I'll go first.

  • I have been known to anneal brass even though I'm 90% sure it has already been annealed. I keep pretty good notes on my reloads. But I'm not good at note taking during the process of making loads. So I will often prep brass and then life stuff happens. I'll come back 15-30 days later and forget if I had annealed. Then that little seed of doubt will plant in my brain, and I'll second guess results.

Or another one:
  • At the end of seating the bullets of a given batch of loads. I intentionally mess up my die settings so I wont forget to purposefully set the seating length. Too many times before I have thought my die was set correctly only to forget I last seated a completely different bullet and seating length.

So what are some of your quirks in the reloading room, cleaning the bore, at the range or in the shop?
 
I'm very OCD when it come to my brass prep. . . and I don't shoot competitively. Every case has to be as uniform (perfect) as I can make it. o_O

Once in a great while I'll have to leave my reloading table due to some interruption and when at the shooting range I find I missed putting powder in a case. :eek: I blame it on my advanced age. ;) But, when that happens, I do find out if how well I'm pulling the trigger or not. :)
 
Quite interested in reloading when I learned from a friend.

Read a few reloading manuals. One thing stuck in my head .... oil/lube causes primer failure.

I have never touched a primer in the 45+ years I have been reloading. I have 3 pairs of tweezers on my loading bench that I use to handle primers and they get cleaned often ( even if I don't use them).

If a primer needs to get put here or there it gets tweezer'd
 
Quite interested in reloading when I learned from a friend.

Read a few reloading manuals. One thing stuck in my head .... oil/lube causes primer failure.

I have never touched a primer in the 45+ years I have been reloading. I have 3 pairs of tweezers on my loading bench that I use to handle primers and they get cleaned often ( even if I don't use them).

If a primer needs to get put here or there it gets tweezer'd
Hopefully this was meant for gun oil/case lube.
 
Ok here goes... I wander into the reloading room with thoughts of doing something, look around, read some notes, lose interest and walk out. Depending on the time of year, phase of the moon, or whatever and over some number of days I might do this 0-6 times before actually reloading something. Pretty sure that should qualify as a quirk.

Buying stuff to only use once/twice, find something I like better for the task and keep meaning to pedal the unused tools but never seem to. I'm bad at this with reloading and shooting equipment, I'm terrible at it with photography stuff.

I'm over 60 now, not that I didn't need to do this since maybe 40 but I've found reminders are so nice, especially paper ones when it comes to stuff like reloading. Avery print on the fly labels for used brass and range excel sheets for ladder testing.

Everything needs to be in it's proper place, although most of the time I can't remember where exactly that is.
 
Boots Obermeyer used to have section on his company’s website that had notes about various things related to barrels and such. One thing that I do after the final tumbling (walnut shell blasting media) is to use compressed air and blow out the dust still in the brass case. He said that the dust residue caused excessive wear on the barrel. And recommend blowing out the brass. It’s not really a pain to do, it goes quite quickly. That’s my quirk and sticking with it for the last 25 years.
 
Boots Obermeyer used to have section on his company’s website that had notes about various things related to barrels and such. One thing that I do after the final tumbling (walnut shell blasting media) is to use compressed air and blow out the dust still in the brass case. He said that the dust residue caused excessive wear on the barrel. And recommend blowing out the brass. It’s not really a pain to do, it goes quite quickly. That’s my quirk and sticking with it for the last 25 years.
I do this with the addition of sprayed with brake cleaner and blew dry with compressed air.
Todd
 

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