Lee or RCBS Single Stage Press?

What I would get is the Lee Classic Cast TURRET press.

It can easily be used as a single stage press as you learn. Put the advancing rod in and you have an "auto-turret". The dies are held in place with a removable turret and change over is seconds if you have extra turrets with dies left in them from the last time. Literally, seconds.

Get the Cast 4 hole turret. You will not be disappointed.

Skip you convinced me, I just ordered the Lee 4 hole Classic Turret Press. I've been using a single stage press since around 1963, but often wondered about those turret presses and soon UPS will be bringing me my very own. Thank you Sir!:D
 
Thank me AFTER you use it! ;)

Using the Lee loader as the bottom of the comparative scale and a Dillon 1050 as the upper end, the Lee Turret is probably at midrange. Both in quality and production ability. One thing it will do, work just as designed. If something goes wrong, a phone call in the first two years will get you new parts. They are good about that.

The thing that really sells me on the Lee Turret is that it can be used as a single stage press too but with the dies stored in the tool head. I don't know how many folks remember the Lyman Spar -T. That press only had one head but could store 6 dies, 2 3 die sets for pistol or 3 2 die sets for rifle. Kinda the same thing with the Lee only the turrets can be swapped out muy pronto.

Not to mention, they are relatively inexpensive.

One word to the wise, the little square plastic index thingy. Make sure you don't try to go backwards with the handle all the way up and maintenance it like the instructions say.

Use it safely!
 
"It does matter to me if the cast iron is cast in lower Slobovia...its a better product and will outlast the stamped Lee loaders ten fold."

Not sure about castings from lower Slobovia, but the Lee Classic Cast is not "stamped". It's made in Wisconsin from cast American steel (used train rails I believe).
 
Skip you convinced me, I just ordered the Lee 4 hole Classic Turret Press. I've been using a single stage press since around 1963, but often wondered about those turret presses and soon UPS will be bringing me my very own. Thank you Sir!:D

Here check out this review. I have one also and load pretty much every handgun caliber and 4 rifle calibers. Buy your extra turret plates at Natchez as the are cheapest. Once you set up it a snap to change calibers.

Real Guns
 
"It does matter to me if the cast iron is cast in lower Slobovia...its a better product and will outlast the stamped Lee loaders ten fold."

Not sure about castings from lower Slobovia, but the Lee Classic Cast is not "stamped". It's made in Wisconsin from cast American steel (used train rails I believe).

Um, a wise man once told me this, it has been hard to live by, I have to admit.

"Never argue with an (fill in the blank). Someone standing nearby won't be able to tell which one is which."

Lower Slobovia or Ohio or Wisconsin or, China for that matter, if it fits my budget and will do the work I want it to do with minimal repairs, I consider buying it.

If it performs to my expectations, I will consider buying another.

It is a matter of focus. We need to stay FOCUSED on the issue. A cast press is not a stamped anything and a Lee loader is not a Lee Classic Cast Turret press.

Apples to apples, not pineapples.
 
Here check out this review. I have one also and load pretty much every handgun caliber and 4 rifle calibers. Buy your extra turret plates at Natchez as the are cheapest. Once you set up it a snap to change calibers.

Real Guns

OCD1,

Thank you Sir! I read your link and then saved it to my files for future reference.

Sorry to say that I ordered three extra turret plates with the press to accommodate the other calibers I reload for now, but should some new caliber handgun come along, like the 32 S&W Long I've been eyeballing I will remember Natchez for future purchases.
 
Don't be afraid of ebay for that kind of stuff either. There are still "stores" on there that have LOTS of reloading stuff. From Lee to Dillon. Throw in the "garage cleaning" folks and you can come up with a good deal on something that cannot go "bad".

FWIW
 
Back
Top