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I made mine in word, but excel would probably be easier.I have an excel sheet that prints me these cards. I do have to feed the paper back in to print the backside and cut them into individual cards but they fit in the lid of most MTM cases.
WOW! did that happen while loading or, firing a round?I powder charge prepared cases in groups of 20, I then weigh those charges in those cases again, then seat the bullets long of those 20 loads. Then go to the next 20 after a nap or if the better half needs something. For me, this prevents major accidents. See the pic below.
I keep notes; in a note binder, in excel, and on printed 2x3 inch paper of the step by step loading process which is kept in the ammo box. I take a lot of measurements on 10 random brass cases. Excel does the averaging. I track the number of times those cases have been fired. I can come back a week later and know exactly where I’m at in the reloading process of those 70/80 rounds.
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It happened to someone else. We are dealing with 50-60 plus thousands of pounds of pressure per square inch or more when we accidently overcharge or cause some kind of restriction of the bullet. I keep the picture as a reminder to obey reloading rules. Not saying that I will totally prevent problems/accidents. My biggest rule is that if I'm tired from the day's events, I don't touch the reloading bench.WOW! did that happen while loading or, firing a round?