MQ1 said:You guys had me laughing my *** off. Obviously, with the Wilson dies I have zero experience. I will refrain from hammering my bullets home! I will save my pennies and buy some boat anchor of a press so that I can press bullets and axel bearings as needed....or maybe I'll get one of those cute little Benchrest looking arbor presses and seal my fate...
I'd rather cry once...which nice press is worth what it costs?
MQ1
P.S. I'll still deprive live primers to get a thrill now and then![]()
I guessing you've never used (or heard of) Wilson neck dies..Shynloco said:In case you are unaware, you CANNOT resize casings using an Arbor Press as they are strictly for seating bullets.
bearing press from harbor freight that is not a press that would be very useful at all in bullet seating or sizing, there very heavy cast iron hulk of a thing! Anyway to each there own, I have been broke before and remember what it was like.
TC260 said:bearing press from harbor freight that is not a press that would be very useful at all in bullet seating or sizing, there very heavy cast iron hulk of a thing! Anyway to each there own, I have been broke before and remember what it was like.
Nice, "you can't afford as nice equipment as me" shot. That's piss poor etiquette right there.
If you've found that a reloading type arbor press loads more concentric ammo than a bearing press then discuss your experience and leave it at. That said, a force indicator is a useful feature no doubt. But If comparing a basic reloading type arbor press (w/o the force indicator) to a bearing press, why would one produce more concentric ammo than the other?
mikecr said:I guessing you've never used (or heard of) Wilson neck dies..Shynloco said:In case you are unaware, you CANNOT resize casings using an Arbor Press as they are strictly for seating bullets.
TC260,TC260 said:If that's not what you meant, fair enough. I understand that what we mean and how it comes across aren't always the same on a forum. When I was reading through the thread there was the comment, if you can't afford $100 you shouldn't get into reloading, then, I was broke too once.... Reading them all at once you can see how I could misconstrue the intended meaning and think it was starting to sound more like a swinging richard contest than a reloading forum. I've always enjoyed your posts and learned much from them.
FWIW, I wasn't making the argument that a reloading-type arbor isn't the best tool for the job (especially one with force indicator). They are, they're designed for it. My point was that I'm not readily seeing why other tools for pushing the seating stem down would necessarily produce lower quality ammo. A mallet yes. With a sharp blow to seat the bullet I can easily see how that could cause problems. If the force is being applied slowly through some other arbor press/drill press/hand, etc, I don't see how the ammo/die can distinguish between X# of force applied from a small press and the same amount being applied from a different source.