dantiff2 said:
........ snip............... Some of the methods talked about would require a cleaning before loading.
Actually nearly every post mentions cleaning the cases, but many of them involve cleaning the cases individually. In other words, someone might consider picking up a piece of brass, hand lubing it (frequently the inside of the neck too), sizing it, and carefully wiping it down (often inside the neck as well) and doing that three hundred times for three hundred cases as "one step". To me it's a nightmare of nine hundred steps (1500 steps if you lube and then clean inside the neck). Plus the process is tedious and time consuming if you do it correctly. It's the one-by-one handling that I try to avoid, not the number of steps; especially if those steps batch-process a hundred or two hundred rounds at a time.
I shoot single shot from a bench and the empties fall onto a clean towel; therefore, they're never gritty. I lube before cleaning using a spritz of lanolin and HEET in a large plastic bag followed by a massage. Then I dump them into a paper towel lined baking tray to dry. If I over did the lube, I rub another paper towel over the whole batch.
Then I decap, shoulder bump, and neck size in my progressive press equipped with a home-made automatic case feeder followed by a SS wet tumble. After drying they're ready to load and assuming the cases don't need further weight-sorting, trimming, neck turning, primer pocket normalizing, or some other one-time process, they first time I have to handle them individually is when I put them into the ammo box in a ready-to-fire condition. That's the basic process if I'm making pretty-good ammo using a Lock-N-Load case activated powder dispenser.
If I'm making match ammo, I prime and then I have to handle them one at a time as I carefully weigh each powder charge, but that's just part of the accuracy game.
Bottom line: I don't try to reduce the number of reloading steps. Rather, I try to minimize the PITA factors and most of those are associated, as far as I'm concerned, with the requirement to handle each case individually.