I am not trying to hijack the thread or anything. As someone who is new to this reloading thing, are you saying that reloading 38 special is a good thing? I mean cost effective and such? I mention it because I have notice that some on Youtube claim you do not save much reloading. However, it seems that on paper at least you can realistically reload 38 special for $0.14 per round. Is that not true for 9mm?
With home-cast bullets of salvaged lead alloy I regularly produce .38 Special and 9X19 ammo for about $3.00 per box (50 rounds, so about $0.06 each). .45ACP, .44 Special, .44-40, etc, cost me about $3.50 per box to reload.
For those not doing their own bullet casting there are several good commercial cast bullet companies offering standard designs for most handgun calibers at or about $70 per 1000 delivered to your doorstep. That adds about $0.07 per round so most finished ammo will be around $0.11 to $0.13 per round ($5.50 to $6.50 per box).
Stepping up to the top of the ammo scale, producing premium quality handgun ammunition with excellent factory bullets in new cartridge cases can still be done in the neighborhood of $0.30 to $0.40 per round. More expensive than bulk-pack range ammo, but considerably less than premium factory ammo (at or about $0.80 to $1.00 per round these days).
Those who argue that there is little or no savings in reloading handgun ammo are probably purchasing factory-made bullets (and small lots rather than bulk purchases), running the total costs up to the level of popular range ammo.
I enjoy reloading, and I'd rather spend a few hours at the loading bench than watching stupid TV shows. The economy is real, but the typical benefits are (1) more shooting for the same budget dollar, and (2) independence from ammo supply channels.