AveragEd
Member
Speed has never been a goal when I switched to progressive loaders. I enjoy the time I spend reloading and still load my rifle ammunition on an RCBS RC IV. For me, it was comfort - I have arthritis as well as two non-repairable torn rotator cuffs and the continual rotations of my shoulders when loading hundreds of rounds of handgun ammo at a sitting was painful. The Dillon 650 gets the job done with far fewer rotations of the handle which is very easy to cycle especially when you consider how many things you are doing with each rotation.
This will sound crazy but I bought Dillon mainly because I couldn't find RCBS or Redding dies for my .38 Super anywhere. I called my media contact at RCBS and learned that dies for that cartridge were not on the production schedule for at least the next three months. I went to Dillon's website to order dies and got to thinking about how nice it would be to assemble my handgun loads the same way I load my shotshells - on a progressive. The seed was planted.
I called RCBS back about buying their progressive (I'm sort of loyal to the "green" brands) but was told the current one was out of production because a new one was forthcoming. Not wanting to be a test mule (went through that with the RCBS Grand shotshell loader), I called Dillon. $1,800 later, I was the proud owner of a 650, five complete tool heads, dies, caliber conversion kits, spare parts kit, tool set with holder and roller handle. The only thing I regret buying is the handle.
Here's a plus with regard to their dies. Get a case stuck (I somehow did even with carbide dies) and you simply pull a pin, separate the die into its two halves and remove the case!
Yeah, I drank the blue kool-aid. But I really enjoy using my 650, especially since it happens without discomfort.
Ed
This will sound crazy but I bought Dillon mainly because I couldn't find RCBS or Redding dies for my .38 Super anywhere. I called my media contact at RCBS and learned that dies for that cartridge were not on the production schedule for at least the next three months. I went to Dillon's website to order dies and got to thinking about how nice it would be to assemble my handgun loads the same way I load my shotshells - on a progressive. The seed was planted.
I called RCBS back about buying their progressive (I'm sort of loyal to the "green" brands) but was told the current one was out of production because a new one was forthcoming. Not wanting to be a test mule (went through that with the RCBS Grand shotshell loader), I called Dillon. $1,800 later, I was the proud owner of a 650, five complete tool heads, dies, caliber conversion kits, spare parts kit, tool set with holder and roller handle. The only thing I regret buying is the handle.
Here's a plus with regard to their dies. Get a case stuck (I somehow did even with carbide dies) and you simply pull a pin, separate the die into its two halves and remove the case!
Yeah, I drank the blue kool-aid. But I really enjoy using my 650, especially since it happens without discomfort.
Ed