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Thread: Any reloaders in the house?
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06-19-2008, 01:24 AM #1
- Join Date
- Jun 2005
- Location
- Iowa
- Posts
- 445
Thanked: 4You can still do well reloading if you shoot a fair amount of mainstream centerfire or some non-mainstream ammo. I shoot a fair amount of 7.62 x 51 Nato, .45 acp, and 9mm Para. I save money by reloading for those. I save even more money by reloading for my 6.5 x 55mm, .30 Mauser, and especially the 50BMG. Long range rifle accuracy is best achieved with a load tailored to the particular gun, something that most commercial match ammo is not capable of. Just my $.02 Just remember that usually you won't end up saving money reloading, you'll just be able to shoot more for the same money.
Wayne
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06-19-2008, 05:18 AM #2
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06-19-2008, 06:39 AM #3
I have handloaded for around twenty years. My motivation was when I realized a .44 Magnum literally EATS money!
I began reloading when I realized I could shoot something like three times as much for the same money. Even using premium bullets! THEN I discovered that by care and meticulous record keeping, I could produce more accurate ammunition than Remington, Winchester, Federal, or ANYBODY ELSE. In MY guns. As someone already said, I could tailor loads to individual guns.
It is a pleasant activity and the pursuit of excellence should never end.
But the prices have gone crazy in the last few years! Every time I go to the gun shop, I am surprised by the NEW prices on dies, presses, powder and all the other supplies and equipment.
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06-19-2008, 09:14 AM #4
The only way to keep costs down is buying in quantities on the internet, but you'll get hit with the hazardous material surcharge.
Gas prices is now afecting my shooting activities, I have to drive 50 miles round trip to get to the closest outdoor range, and the fees are around $12 por the day (not bad).
At the end of the day, if I shoot 300 rounds of .45 ACP it probably comes to around $60 per session
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06-19-2008, 03:24 PM #5
- Join Date
- Apr 2007
- Posts
- 1,034
Thanked: 150I know! I have joined a trap league, and it cots $20 every wednesday for the targets. If I purchased the rounds that I shot, it would be, at a minimum, $8 per box, and we go through 4 boxes each night. That's $52 each week. I can reload them for around $4 per box which drops the cost to around $36. Over 10 weeks, I'm saving $160 by reloading, but it is still a whole lot more expensive than it used to be.
Matt
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06-19-2008, 04:33 PM #6
a quick lesson in economics for the action pistol types out there. before I got married, I shot every weekend, either idpa, idsa, uspsa or ipsc. yeah, i was a shooting junkie!
number of rounds i shot per month : 500 or more. (75 per idpa match, 150 or more for ipsc)
cost for nasty ass WWB ammo - 26$/100 rounds (it's way more this year)
cost for me to reload 100 rounds of superior ammo - 9c for jacketed bullet + 2c for powder + 2c for primer = 13$/100 (always picked up brass for free)
money saved EVERY MONTH - $65 (unless I shot more, and then I would save more)
thanks to my trusty dillon multistage press, I can crank out 250 rounds per hour or so. so with one mornings worth of work, 2-3 hours, I would have enough ammo to last me the month for less than half the cost of store bought ammo.
my press paid for itself in less than 6 months, including scales, manuals, calipers, etc, etc.
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06-19-2008, 09:01 PM #7
I used to load a few thousand rounds a week when I was shooting competitivly, I would love to get into it again... But the costs now keep me from much more than my long range single shot pistols. I have a hard time keeping more than a few hondred rounds a year stored up.