Sharing Your Stats

otisrush

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[I thought of putting this in The Lounge - but it seems more appropriate here.]

I happened to be reviewing my reloading log (stored in Excel) today and I noticed my total round count is at 9,992. I feel like going downstairs and loading up 8 rounds just so it'll go to 10,000.....kind of like driving around the block to watch the odometer turn over.

I'm still a newb compared to other folks around here. If folks are willing to share, it might be interesting to get some stats from others.

For me:

When I started: Fall '14.

Calibers I Load: 9mm, .38 Spcl, .223, .243, .270 and .32 Rem

Why I Enjoy Loading:
* Gives me total control over availability and quality of my ammo.
* Enables me to keep my grandpa's gun shooting (that's the .32 Remington) given ammo is hard to find and expensive.
 
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I started reloading in 1963.

I've never been a compulsive record keeper so the best estimate I can provide is that I've loaded a bunch.

I load 45 acp, 38 special, 357 mag, 44 mag, 350 Remington Magnum, 270, 375 H&H, and 308.

I handload because it saves lots of money, solves ammo availability issues and it lets me shoot the ammo that does best for my purposes.
 
I started reloading in the mid 70s.After learning about my new hobby,my friends didn't want to come at my place to have a beer;they were scared they'd get blown up with the house.Reloading in my neck of the woods was then considered closer to voodoo than what it really is.I might add it didn't take long to start casting my own bullets.
I load for .223,30-30,.308,30-06,38-55 and 45-70 in rifles and for .38spl,.357 .41 and .44 Mag,45 acp and Colt and 9mm.
When I started,I was in motorcycling,fast cars, chasing girls,having a few beers and guns.Nowadays,I'm down to guns and having a few beers.Ain't got no money and/or too old for fast cars and motorcycles.As far as chasing girls,I grew less hair and a lot more belly to be a serious contender!I've quitted when I was ahead!
Qc
 
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I started watching my dad reload in 1970, when I was 10. In 1979, I bought my own set-up to reload for my first revolver, an Interarms Virginian Dragoon .44 Magnum. I used to laugh about the fact the stores wouldn't let me buy loaded ammo because I wasn't 21, but they'd let me buy all the components to load my own.

I've loaded lots of different cartridges over the years, but now I load .44 Magnum, .357 Magnum, .45 Colt, .38 Special, .30-30 Winchester, .270 Winchester, 8mm Mauser, and 12 Gauge. I don't load 9mm or .380 ACP, I stocked up long ago, and I still buy 9mm when it's a good deal. I'm going to start loading 10mm in the near future, as I bought a Delta Elite last year. I needed to make sure it was a keeper before I buy dies.

Why do I reload? Because I have complete control over selection and availability. And, it's a relaxing hobby that requires extreme attention to detail.
 
I started in 1989 and though I had always been passionate about it, life evolved about 6 years back and I really ramped it up. At the same time is when I began to keep very (very!) detailed records.

Here in 2017 calendar year I have produced 8,200 rounds of ammo.
 
I started reloading in late 2008. I was looking for a good varmint gun so I bought a Remington 700 SPS .17 Fireball knowing full on that ammo was scarce and I would have to learn to reload my own. That's what started it all.

Now I also load 223, 22-250, 30-06, 38 spl, 357 mag, 357 max, 10mm, 44 mag, and 45-70. Used to load 327 federal but I traded that gun. In April this year I started casting my own bullets

I did take a hiatus from shooting and reloading from 2011-2013. It was not a good time. I didn't have a stock pile and I grew tired of trying to hunt down supplies.
 
Started in the mid-'70s and lost count when I ran out of fingers and toes. I have no idea how many reloads I've made, but it's a lot.

.38, .357, .41 Mag, .223, .30-06, .30 Herrett, .300 BO, 12 ga, 20 ga.
 
Interesting. I shot 66 matches so far this year with one more tomorrow.
I will have to give an estimate of round count.
 
I started reloading(and casting) in 1972.....Started keeping a reloading log in 1992. Total rd count loaded from 1992 to tonight is 107,222. I load for 23 calibers and 2 guages. Casting and loading is the only way I can afford to shoot. I am a hunter and compulsive plinker. Don't shoot competitively.
 
I started reloading at 15 in 1977 but didn't load much between 1980 and 2000. I have loaded around 9,000 rounds of 9mm, 38 Special, 40, 41 mag, 44 mag, 204, 223, 32 Special, 30-06, and 7mm Mag. all on a single stage RCBS Junior that I bought new for $25 at the White Elephant in Spokane, WA. I have dies marked $9.95, powder marked $7.95, and bullets for 6.95 per hundred. I, too, keep a spreadsheet showing date, number of loads, and all load data.
 
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Hunted a bit as a teen in the early 60s, but the gun went away for over 40 years. Started shooting again in 2012, added other firearms, then started reloading that fall. Since then my logs show I've fired 24,176 hand loaded pistol and rifle rounds averaging about 5k/yr. Also fired about 11k hand loaded 12ga shotgun shells during that same period.

Calibers? 380Auto, 9mm, 45ACP, 223, 6mmAR, 308, 30-06, and 338LM. Oh, and 12ga.

The only competition I engage in is with myself :)
 
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Ones I have loaded but currently do not -- but may again in the future: .32 ACP, .38 Super, .357 Max, .41 Magnum, .45 Colt, .460 Rowland and .500 S&W Magnum and 20 ga... .243 Win, .25-06, .308, .30-06, 7mm Rem Mag and .300 Win Mag

Ones I currently load: .32 S&W Long (wadcutter), .327 Federal, .380 Auto, 9mm, .38 Special, .357 Mag, .357-44 B&D .40 S&W, 10mm, .45 Auto, .460 Magnum... .223, .30 Carbine, 8mm Mauser

I may have forgotten something in there...

I use a hybrid system where almost all of my sizing, priming and flaring is on a Lee Pro-1000, all my powder falls from a Lyman 55 and all my bullets are seated single stage on a Lee Classic Cast.
 
I started loading metallic cartridges in 1972 on an old Wells C-press. I started out loading .30 Carbine and .38 Special. Started shot shell reloading in early 1977, by then I had replaced the Wells C-press with an RCBS Jr. In 1985 I purchased a Dillon RL-550 and have done most, but not all of my metallic reloading on the 550 progressive since that date.

How many rounds? I shot competitively in numerous sports, mostly USPSA, for many years. Unless you've done it, you would have no reason to believe how many rounds I've loaded; I'll just say it's been a very large amount.
 
Started in 1980

Started in 1980 with Lee Hand Loaders. I had a life layoff for about 10 years getting my son big enough to shoot. Early in 2012 I got back into it again. After Sandy Hook I started stocking up on components and reloading in a big way. Even though I only have a single stage, I work with it long and hard. No idea of round count, but I've shot a lot, especially after getting into semi autos and I've bought maybe 4 boxes of new ammo in that last 20 years.
 
I also started in Fall of '14. I haven't tallied it up yup....
IMG_3577.jpg


What's a half gallon of primers? :)
 
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Haha, you made me laugh!

Anyone can call me nuts (and they'd be right) but except for those that have bounced their way to freedom... gulp, I actually have almost EVERY single spent primer that I have punched out. They will go to a scrap metal recycling center some day but in the mean time, I have them collected in 8-lb plastic smokeless powder jugs.

They get heavy when you fill one of those jugs, I must say.
 
I started reloading in 1978 for a 6" Model 57.41 Magnum and a Remington 700 BDL in .270 Winchester. I sold my FFA project farm animals in my senior year of high school to purchase those two guns and a Remington 870 12 Gauge.

I used RCBS equipment then pretty much exclusively. I also had a great girlfriend that if I asked, would deprime, resize and reprise cases for me occasionally before I got home from work so I could go hunting as soon as I got home. I still miss that girl.

Reloading allowed me to work up loads that shot more accurately, and I killed several hundred groundhogs each year using the pistol and rifle. I was out pretty much every single night around 7 p.m.

After a long hiatus getting my college degree, bar tending, riding motorcycles and chasing girls I finally settled down and I now load for the same .270 rifle, a different Model 57 .41 Magnum and a Model 29 .44 Magnum.

I was able to purchase nicer equipment this time around and hit the ground not really running, but at a fast trot as it came back to me pretty fast.

I enjoy it, it gets me away from everyone else and not only is it relaxing, but then I get to go shoot the fruits of my labors!
 
I started handloading in the early 80's. A Lee Loader and a rubber mallet at the dining room table.

That didn't last long. With two babies trying to sleep, my wife very quickly looked askance at this noisy new hobby of mine. That was the opening I needed.

"Well, honey, they have this thing called a press. It's really quiet."

I've been using that RCBS Rockchucker ever since.

Round count? Dunno. I've still got the notebook I carefully recorded each and every load with, across all those years. Stuff I load today goes in an electronic (Excel) log - and as I have time I'm converting over all those old paper records. But it'll be awhile. All I can say is that between a bunch of rifle and handgun calibers, it's been a lot.

It's interesting what has changed with handloading. Back in the day my log would have frequent "ev" (estimated velocity) notations, a number I arrived at by cross-referencing multiple load manuals and extrapolating to my own guns. Nowadays, of course, there are several very accessible chronograph solutions. It's nice having actual velocity data, along with spread and standard deviation when working up a load!

Digital scales and powder dispensers are wonderful. I still have my old RCBS 10-10 beam scale, but haven't used it in years. Or that old manual powder trickler.

Progressive presses got much better. Dillon changed everything.

I was fortunate also in that when I started I was only a few miles from The Loading Bench, a reloading store in Annandale, Virginia. It was the only pure reloading shop I've ever seen, before or since, and it allowed me ready access to fairly exotic components. I became a regular there, first with "the Colonel," the fellow who owned and ran it, and later with Dale, his son. Dale used to joke that I should go ahead and just set up direct-deposit of part of my weekly paycheck with the store. Alas, The Loading Bench is no longer there.

What hasn't changed with handloading is the pleasure of creating ammunition that is better than anything you can buy. The parents have changed, but we still have Unique. And Bullseye. And 4350.

And we still have the magic.
 
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I buy gun powder in 8lbs kegs and primers 5000 at a time. So it's had to tell how many rounds since the late 79. But it would have to be close 100,000.
 
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