LittleCooner
Member
My suggestions -
1) look at purchasing a lee priming tool. You will learn along the way that priming is better done one at a time with a primer tool. I sit in front of the TV at "priming time" and prime what ever batch I am working at the time. You will need shell holders for the tool, as they are flat, washer shaped, to just slide into the tool. Tray will hold 100 primers at a time and shaking will turn them all cup down.
2) some place like Sinclair International, etc sells "imperial sizing lube". A small shoe shine can size will last years and years. Try it on the 223 and 308. place on by finger and once you get the die lubed, it takes a very small amount. It makes a lot less mess than a pad and other type lubes IMHO. I just wipe off with a rag after I resize and continue the process.
3) on a budget? These cheap ( $ 10) digital dial calipers work great and the ones I have appear to provide correct reading when compared to my old set that now costs well over $ 100.
4) somewhere along the way, after a few reloading cycles, the brass will grow on the 223 and 308 and require trimming. You will need an outside-inside deburring tool. I usually use the inside part to do a light chamfer on the inside of new cases to help in bullet seating any. You can use this Tool by hand just fine, but there are two ways to speed up the process and save the hand. One is a "Tool base" that looks like the old pencil sharpner that you mount on the bench, but the one I perter is the holder sold by Sinclair Int. that you chuck in a drill. I have this battery powdered Black and Decker drill/cordless screwdriver that turns slow and it is the berries for using the deburring tool.
If you are headed for extreme accuracy- get a flash hole deburring tool from Sinclair and "prep your cases". look inside your new brass and you will see where a sprue is found in some of them where the manufacturing process of punching the flash hole left a sprue on on side. Tool is cheap and just has a cutter you drop down and cut out the sprue. This is the first basic step to anyone in the extreme accuracy game in prepping cases for matches.
Good luck, I think you will enjoy "rolling your own" and punching holes downrange.
1) look at purchasing a lee priming tool. You will learn along the way that priming is better done one at a time with a primer tool. I sit in front of the TV at "priming time" and prime what ever batch I am working at the time. You will need shell holders for the tool, as they are flat, washer shaped, to just slide into the tool. Tray will hold 100 primers at a time and shaking will turn them all cup down.
2) some place like Sinclair International, etc sells "imperial sizing lube". A small shoe shine can size will last years and years. Try it on the 223 and 308. place on by finger and once you get the die lubed, it takes a very small amount. It makes a lot less mess than a pad and other type lubes IMHO. I just wipe off with a rag after I resize and continue the process.
3) on a budget? These cheap ( $ 10) digital dial calipers work great and the ones I have appear to provide correct reading when compared to my old set that now costs well over $ 100.
4) somewhere along the way, after a few reloading cycles, the brass will grow on the 223 and 308 and require trimming. You will need an outside-inside deburring tool. I usually use the inside part to do a light chamfer on the inside of new cases to help in bullet seating any. You can use this Tool by hand just fine, but there are two ways to speed up the process and save the hand. One is a "Tool base" that looks like the old pencil sharpner that you mount on the bench, but the one I perter is the holder sold by Sinclair Int. that you chuck in a drill. I have this battery powdered Black and Decker drill/cordless screwdriver that turns slow and it is the berries for using the deburring tool.
If you are headed for extreme accuracy- get a flash hole deburring tool from Sinclair and "prep your cases". look inside your new brass and you will see where a sprue is found in some of them where the manufacturing process of punching the flash hole left a sprue on on side. Tool is cheap and just has a cutter you drop down and cut out the sprue. This is the first basic step to anyone in the extreme accuracy game in prepping cases for matches.
Good luck, I think you will enjoy "rolling your own" and punching holes downrange.