YES, YES YES, what he said!!! AND, if you are over 70, do the visual by row TWICE.... JohnThe best way I know to avoid this potentially very bad problem is to turn all your pistol cases upside down in a load block. Then one by one charge them. After all are charged, do a visual check of all cases before seating bullets.
This fail-safe system has kept me from double charging or failing to charge a case for over 50 years.
Yogi Berra said that he double-checked something three times. JeffYES, YES YES, what he said!!! AND, if you are over 70, do the visual by row TWICE.... John
I stand up so I can see the powder in every case PERIOD I use a small led flashlight, Some years ago one of my daughters was complaining at me while I was charging cases I almost did not catch it, I had passed up on two cases the RCBS charge master had miss thrown 2 charges so I dumped them and recharged the cases at 50 on the counter I figured I was done, For some nagging reason I looked and two shinny cases were glaring at me, NO distractions and always double check !!!YES, YES YES, what he said!!! AND, if you are over 70, do the visual by row TWICE.... John
With a turret or progressive press ?
If you're over 75, check three times.YES, YES YES, what he said!!! AND, if you are over 70, do the visual by row TWICE.... John
I shoot a lot of handgun ammo in both carbines and handguns, my serious stuff I load on a little Harrell's PPC press, 100 at a time, one step at a time, use my V3 for powder. For all the plinking and steel plate shooting I use a 750 Dillion or a 650, both have a powder check warning buzzer, I still worry about them. I watch the powder bar each pull of the handle. I would not use a manual progressive or a turret press for any loads that are easy to double charge, don't trust myself enough anymore. So far I've caught all of my screw ups over the last 60ys by paying attention and double checking everything but it's like @Pawnee Bill said, not if but when. It's not the squibs that worry me.... JohnWith a turret or progressive press ?
It's not the squibs that worry me.... John
I don't shoot that fast. If I don't feel recoil I stop instantly, count to 30 with the barrel pointed in a safe direction and see what is going on. Guess I got used to doing it back in the 60s shooting bulls eye and later shooting skeet, just natural with me, YMMV JohnWhile I understand what you're saying, I see many more issues (read: blown-up firearms) with squibs than with double charges. Not saying double charges aren't an issue, just that squibs are much more common.
I don't shoot that fast. If I don't feel recoil I stop instantly, count to 30 with the barrel pointed in a safe direction and see what is going on. Guess I got used to doing it back in the 60s shooting bulls eye and later shooting skeet, just natural with me, YMMV John
One possible solution:Thanks for the replies regarding double charges or no charge loads. I just started with a turret press and pistol after 25 years with the same single stage. The entire operation with the turret does not instill confidence and I never felt at complete ease firing with the last 300 9x19 I made. I also noticed that in my haste to collect my brass at the range, I also picked up other's brass and had problems with that also, including mil-crimp and a couple of 380 auto. I dont think I am going to find a powder that will top a double charge out with 9x19 and 380 or especially 38 Spl. Throughout the process, I am invested in the Red brand and I dont see powder lock out die. It looks like the RCBS literature excludes the Lee setups. I purchased an inexpensive digital scale and found out that the variance in brass case weights exceeds the charge weights I am using, meaning that a scale cannot reliably detect an unload or a double load. Any additional suggestions besides toss the Lee and drop $1K on Dillon are welcomed.
When I was loading pistol on a single stage I would charge each case in the loading block. When done I would use a small light and slowly scan each case in a row right, then the next row left until the last row, then reverse and slowly scan in reverse, similar to @K22. I would also throw a max charge, my selected charge, and minimum charge as samples and check the visual volume comparison, so I had a good idea to judge for proper charge volume.
When I was using the Dillon 650, even with the charge alarm, I would position a bench light and my eye so I could visually inspect the case before I placed the bullet. If there was ever any doubt I would pull that cartridge, put is aside and later pull the bullet, and reload it.
I never had an issue I didn't catch, but whenever I was rushed, or interrupted, I would take a short break, double check everything and then start again. As said @Pawnee Bill, I'm in the class of those thatJ
Sometimes it pays to be a dinosaur with my 50-year-old RCBS Jr. single stage press.When I was loading pistol on a single stage I would charge each case in the loading block. When done I would use a small light and slowly scan each case in a row right, then the next row left until the last row, then reverse and slowly scan in reverse, similar to @K22. I would also throw a max charge, my selected charge, and minimum charge as samples and check the visual volume comparison, so I had a good idea to judge for proper charge volume.
When I was using the Dillon 650, even with the charge alarm, I would position a bench light and my eye so I could visually inspect the case before I placed the bullet. If there was ever any doubt I would pull that cartridge, put is aside and later pull the bullet, and reload it.
I never had an issue I didn't catch, but whenever I was rushed, or interrupted, I would take a short break, double check everything and then start again. As said @Pawnee Bill, I'm in the class of those that will and realize no one is immune. And, now that I'm upwards of 77, I'm following @K22 and going for the 3 time checks!!!