Just for another view on reloading 223. I started loading with a Lee Loader in 1970. A friend loaded me his Lyman Spar-T turret press and I was off! In 1984 Dillion went customer direct with sales of the RL450 (1 month after I bought mine from a gun shop for a $100 more than their direct price!)
After the initial set up I loaded a 5000 round batch of 9mm to feed my MAC-10. The next batch was 20,000 rounds of 223! These are the "Wrong" things I did to my ammo:
1) Mixed military brass with some commercial thrown in.
2) Full Length sized with a Small Base die.
3) Primer crimps removed by swaging, not reaming!
4) loaded on a progressive press.
5) powder dropped from a measurer, not weighed
6) primers were from 6 or 8 different lot numbers (CCI Sm Rifle Mag, was the Lyman recommended at that time)
7) my bullets were Winchester 55 grain FMJ, surplus from the US Army going to the 62 grain steel core bullet. Meant for 1-12 twist not for 1-9 that my AR has!
Last) I Just dumped the ammo in water proof containers and stacked it in the unheated/un A/Ced barn, for up to 32 years.
None of this ammo was put in a chamber gauge, or trimmed, or babied in any way.
I still have a few thousand left, About 10 years ago I gave 3000 to one of my sons for his then new AR.
What kind of mess did I end up with? The gun I had then was a Mini-14 Stainless: I got 5" at 100 from a rest and scoped. That is poor in my opinion!
I then tried a blue Mini-14 and got 2" at 100 yards. That is marginal in my opinion!
A friend shot some from his Cooper 21 and got 1/4" groups At 100 yards. That is great in my opinion!
I got a 1996 Bushmaster AR-15, shot the same ammo, off the same rest at the same range and targets, I got 1/4" groups!!! I now have a Cooper 21 also and get 1/4" and sometimes smaller groups with this misloaded, poorly stored, mish mash ammo.
What is the moral to this story? A good load, reasonable care, and minor attention to detail (And no advice from the internet!) got me ammo that is still good 35 years later!
BTW retail price for 223 FMJ back then was $20/100 on sale. My reloads cost 8.5 cents each or $8.50/100! including buying used brass. The entire batch cost $1,700.00 That much new ammo would has cost $4000 or a little less for bulk buying! I saved about $2000 to 2300! That buys a lot of stuff even today! But it also cost a month and a half of Saturdays, Sundays & free evenings!
I kept telling my wife; "Look at all the money I'm saving!" She stayed with me anyway (next May will be 42 years!)
Ivan