View Single Post
Old January 26, 2005, 04:57 PM   #13
Leftoverdj
Senior Member
 
Join Date: October 15, 2004
Posts: 934
I'm gonna throw in a minority opinion here. You don't have to know it all (or much of anything) to get started. Buy a Lee Loader in the caliber you want to start with. $20 new, $10 used. Open it and look at the load sheet. Buy a can of the powder it suggests for the bullet you want to use, a box of bullets, and a box of primers. Get a plastic or rubber mallet. Go home. Follow the instructions. Load.

That's all there is to getting started.

Time you have loaded a few hundred rounds on the Lee Loader, you will understand all the basic steps of reloading. Then will be plenty of time for all the other stuff people have been telling you to do. You'll want better and faster equipment, but the cost of the Lee Loader was cheap tuition. Somewhere down the road, you can give or sell it to someone else getting started.
Leftoverdj is offline  
 
Page generated in 0.02566 seconds with 8 queries