- Feb 4, 2013
- 28,175
Of course, most folks with a Chargemaster have forgotten to close the powder empty hole and later pour powder all over the place when loading it up again!
There are those who HAVE and those who WILL.
Of course, most folks with a Chargemaster have forgotten to close the powder empty hole and later pour powder all over the place when loading it up again!
I used to do that. Now I check every 100 or so rounds. The Dillon is boringly consistent.
There are those who HAVE and those who WILL.
That’s what I do. On my 550B I check when it’s time to top off the primers. NEVER had a problem. Boring.
I am tending to do it every 5 primer reloads.
One day that might bite me.
But so far, I have never had to adjust it
I've never had to adjust once it is set, so maybe not.
I went with a Lee Classic Turret Kit folks.
I'll have tons more questions when I'm ready to actually start the factory.
If you'd like a refresher course, drop me a PM and we'll get something set up.I went with a Lee Classic Turret Kit folks.
I'll have tons more questions when I'm ready to actually start the factory.
With the Lee system, It looks like you need Lee dies in order to take advantage of the powder charge system right?
I mean...the one set of Lee dies I have has a hole for it to charge through. I was told other manufacturers wouldn't.
Now I see how it works.
So I guess I can use any dies, as long as I have the powder through Lee dies as well.
Do you think the auto drum is precise enough for long range match loads? If so I'll buy some if these.