OP
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2005
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I probably don't have much to offer to this discussion which is actually pretty good.
I have a Hornady AP and a Dillion SDB. I have a reloading buddy that also has a SDB and a 650 and we both have numerous single stage presses.
You asked about the Dillion specifically. I have nothing in the SDB and it is set up for my 9mm pistol and carbine ammo for steel plates in a league. The best part of the SDB is that it is simple, has few issues and makes consistent ammo. What I don't like is it is hard to see in the case to check powder. I also am not a fan of the proprietary dies although they work fine but the precision of completely smooth cases is not there. Too much coke bottle look.
I am not a fan of my friends 650. It came set up for 45 and I set it up for .223 for him. It was the first time I had ever done and went step by step in the instructions so I don't know how long it would take a seasoned person. It seemed to take me a while. I don't like the primer feed carousel and the shell plate is way to jumpy for me. I probably could cure that given enough time. Friend now has Alzheimers and so the press just sets there unless I am around to set things up and run it but I live 4 hours away.
All that said, I like to have a powder cop on my presses. I also am fascinated with the Mighty Armory Dies and have seen some vids/demos of how well they size and crimp to SAMI specs. They are pricey but with the 550 you can use them.
My overall opinion (which is worth less than a cup of coffee and I don't drink the stuff) is I want a press that is basic in operation, as foolproof as possible, I can have a powder cop on it, I can use any dies I want or can afford. I am not into spending more money that I need to and the speed of the 550 is plenty fast enough for me. I get low on competition ammo and sit down at my SDB and crank our a 1,000 in no time. The 550 is plenty fast enough. Its like buying a Corvette when a Toyota will accomplish the same goal of getting the job done. Obviously the 550 does not work with a powder cop as it only has 4 stations but the plus of that press is the manual drop.
For versatility, the 550 is hard to beat. I see you said you have a turret press already which could handle your large primer needs for the most part.
If you are into spending money and it is not a big deal, then by all means, get the 750 or bigger. I shoot plenty and could not justify it, would rather put more money into firearms. Happy loading
Worthwhile comments; thank you.