liveround said:
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Is a bullet comparator and calipers the same thing?
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Tumbler - not sure yet
What measuring tools am I leaving out? This is where it gets confusing to me.....
Are these good choices?
Thanks
I've been thinking about your origional question. One problem is that when you start out you "don't know what you don't know". Will you load only one caliber or not. Will you load a thousand rounds per week or a hundred rounds per month? These things are hard to predict and your initial thoughts could very well change after you get more experience. You're wise to try to think through and get opinions from others.
You can use a set of inexpensive calipers to measure the overall length of your finished rounds to be sure they are short enough to fit in your magazine and are seated sufficiently and to be sure they aren't too short so as to cause a compressed load. Some people have done that and only that for years.
But if you catch the accuracy virus there is no end to what you will do to get more precision in your groups and that often starts at the loading bench. Accuracy is like a drug.
You'll want to be more accurate in your measurement which is where a bullet comparator comes in handy. Hornady makes a kit consisting of a body which clamps onto a normal set of calipers and a special insert for that body which is sized to various bullet calipers. Rather than contact the bullet at the very tip, it contacts the ogive (curved part) and that's supposed to give you more consistent results. In short, bullet comparators attach to any normal calipers, they're cheap, and probably worth having.
As for a tumbler, I think it's hard to beat wet-stainless-steel-media cleaning. Cheaper than dirt sells the Frankford Arsenal Platinum Rotary Tumbler With Sifter Lid and Stainless Steel Media for $147.41 and that includes fifty bucks worth of SS media. You will be hard pressed to beat that deal. I went cheap with the Harbor Freight version and I'm sorry I did. The Frankford has a much larger drum and I wish I had purchased it instead.
Another mistake I made was when I came to my bullet seating die. I load exclusively .223 which I shoot from my bolt gun only. I try to seat the bullet so that it is a particular distance from engaging the rifling. Since I use a variety of bullet types and since each is different and since we're talking about only a few thousands of an inch one way or another, I was spending a great deal of time fiddling with and adjusting my seating die to get just the right CBTO (case base to ogive) measurement. Naturally, I had to go through the fiddly adjustment process each time I loaded a different type of bullet. I recently bought a Forster micrometer type seating die and it's the best thing since sliced bread. Now I just dial in a particular number and seat each bullet type perfectly first time. My old die, in perfect condition, is now a personal museum piece and turns out to be money wasted.
The problem is, I didn't even know these existed when I started.
Other than mentioning a micrometer seating die, which you may not need depending on what kind of reloading you get involved in, I will say that I'm satisfied with my Hornady progressive press. I'm glad I didn't try to save a few bucks by purchasing a Lee progressive, which requires a lot more fiddling to set up and maintain; and I consider myself a fiddler. Starting with a decent single stage press is not a bad idea, but I would certainly consider some sort of quick change die system so that you can remove and replace dies without going through a tedious set-up and adjustment process each time.
Good luck. It sounds like you're well on your way to learning how to increase the cost of the sport of shooting, greatly increasing your frustration level, while spending hour after hour in your garage, away from your family as you manipulate highly flammable chemicals. Don't worry, we're all similarly afflicted.