Skip Sackett
US Veteran
what would you do?
Let me clarify my question. I'm don't want anyone to say: "They are two expensive." Listen, coming from a bunch of folks that lie to themselves about how much cheaper reloading is, that is the last thing that needs to be said!
At any rate, my experience has been great with my Dillons. I have 3 Square Deal presses, one is a "B" and an XL650 with a case feeder.
Now, I didn't pay list for any of the SD presses. 2 I bought off of local guys that either couldn't make them run or just wanted to get out of reloading. In all 3 I don't have $550. I did send one in to have refurbished and just gave that one to our oldest son. He will get years and years of use out of it!
All of that being said, I don't have any strong mounts for any of my presses. They mount directly to a bench.
Their service is exceptional and technical support is tops.
But with all that "good" about them there are two things I would change in a heartbeat if I was on their design team.
One would be the way that primer system works on the XL650. If a case doesn't take a primer away, I don't want the primer system to advance. Oh, sure, I can remove the "cam" that actuates it and advance them by hand, and I have, but like the SDB, why can't the unused primer just stay there? Maybe a "cam" that can be easily folded in and out of use. No tools needed, simply fold it up and no primers advance, fold it out and away you go. That's one thing.
The other thing applies to both types of presses. The only thing that each of them needs is a "motor" and they could be almost automatic, that is, until you have to do something with the spent primers. Maybe it is designed that way to force you to stop at some point, not sure. What I did do was make some very simple modifications to my presses to get the spent primers out of that silly little attached box.
On the SDB's, I took an 1/8" NPT tap and partially tapped the hole where the spent primers exit the press ram. Then I got a hose barb that was 1/8" NPT to 3/8" ID clear plastic tubing. The hole in the barb is large and the way the primers come out of the smaller press, they almost cannot get jammed on it before exiting. The other end of that hose goes into a coffee can that has a hole cut in the top to accept it. Works great.
The XL650 was a little trickier. The hole that the primers exit the press through is square and I didn't want to drill it to make it round. If it had been, it would have gotten the same treatment as the SDB! What I did instead was this: I had an extra primer catch cup and drilled a hole in the bottom of it. I took the same type of hose barb only with 3/8" NPT threads on it, drilled and tapped the box and inserted the barb in the bottom of the box. Only one problem, the threads stuck up from the bottom a good 3/8"! So, here comes the hillbilly in me, I took and filled the bottom of the box with silicone and smoothed it into a funnel towards the barb. Onto the barb I put the same 3/8" ID soft plastic tubing and put the same coffee can assembly at the other end. Not every primer falls through that one so well but there aren't more than two or three in there at any one time.
So, that is what I have done and would like to see done on future models. Just me though. Seems like I am always tinkering.
What would you do? I'm sure there are other things that folks could or have come up with, share them!
Let me clarify my question. I'm don't want anyone to say: "They are two expensive." Listen, coming from a bunch of folks that lie to themselves about how much cheaper reloading is, that is the last thing that needs to be said!

At any rate, my experience has been great with my Dillons. I have 3 Square Deal presses, one is a "B" and an XL650 with a case feeder.
Now, I didn't pay list for any of the SD presses. 2 I bought off of local guys that either couldn't make them run or just wanted to get out of reloading. In all 3 I don't have $550. I did send one in to have refurbished and just gave that one to our oldest son. He will get years and years of use out of it!
All of that being said, I don't have any strong mounts for any of my presses. They mount directly to a bench.
Their service is exceptional and technical support is tops.
But with all that "good" about them there are two things I would change in a heartbeat if I was on their design team.
One would be the way that primer system works on the XL650. If a case doesn't take a primer away, I don't want the primer system to advance. Oh, sure, I can remove the "cam" that actuates it and advance them by hand, and I have, but like the SDB, why can't the unused primer just stay there? Maybe a "cam" that can be easily folded in and out of use. No tools needed, simply fold it up and no primers advance, fold it out and away you go. That's one thing.
The other thing applies to both types of presses. The only thing that each of them needs is a "motor" and they could be almost automatic, that is, until you have to do something with the spent primers. Maybe it is designed that way to force you to stop at some point, not sure. What I did do was make some very simple modifications to my presses to get the spent primers out of that silly little attached box.
On the SDB's, I took an 1/8" NPT tap and partially tapped the hole where the spent primers exit the press ram. Then I got a hose barb that was 1/8" NPT to 3/8" ID clear plastic tubing. The hole in the barb is large and the way the primers come out of the smaller press, they almost cannot get jammed on it before exiting. The other end of that hose goes into a coffee can that has a hole cut in the top to accept it. Works great.
The XL650 was a little trickier. The hole that the primers exit the press through is square and I didn't want to drill it to make it round. If it had been, it would have gotten the same treatment as the SDB! What I did instead was this: I had an extra primer catch cup and drilled a hole in the bottom of it. I took the same type of hose barb only with 3/8" NPT threads on it, drilled and tapped the box and inserted the barb in the bottom of the box. Only one problem, the threads stuck up from the bottom a good 3/8"! So, here comes the hillbilly in me, I took and filled the bottom of the box with silicone and smoothed it into a funnel towards the barb. Onto the barb I put the same 3/8" ID soft plastic tubing and put the same coffee can assembly at the other end. Not every primer falls through that one so well but there aren't more than two or three in there at any one time.
So, that is what I have done and would like to see done on future models. Just me though. Seems like I am always tinkering.
What would you do? I'm sure there are other things that folks could or have come up with, share them!
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