I resisted giving my tools inventory because I go all long-winded explaining why I made each choice. WAY too long a post. So, I decided to leave that out. I just show the list here.
In 2010 I set aside all my reloading gear and replaced everything (except those few pieces which were already the perfect choice). This is what I kept.
Manuals
Eye protection (Dedicated to loading. Never load without it.)
Lee Classic Turret Press and my old RCBS Rockchucker single stage
2x6 board to mount the presses on (one at a time, naturally)
a folding workbench to mount the board on
Lee Dies, carbide, for each chambering I load. Some 4-die set, some 3-die set
Lee Safety Prime. Not perfect, but close and will do for now.
Lee Pro Auto-disk powder measure (working up to one per die set)
Turret disk, one per set of dies
Calipers
Dropcloth
Lee Dippers
RCBS 10-10 Beam Scale.
Powder Trickler
Powder funnel
Bullet puller
Brass Tumbler. Got mine as a gift. I think my clean, but tarnished, brass embarrassed my friend
2 Loading blocks
Powder Trickler
misc accessories & tools, (e.g. chamfer tool, primer pocket uniformer, magnifying glass, etc)
Miscellaneous coffee cans, etc for storing stuff (but powder and primers ALWAYS stay in their factory packaging)
I think that is everything.
For loading the quantities that I shoot, this is ideal for me and my personal style. I also don't like monitoring multiple simultaneous operations and I like the quick and easy caliber changes afforded by the Lee Turret press over the more complicated and expensive caliber swaps of the progressives.
If you shoot more, a progressive might be better. If you shoot small quantities of rifle ammunition with the goal of supreme accuracy, a single stage (RCBS RockChucker, Lyman Orange Crusher, Lee Classic Cast, Forster Co-Ax, etc) might be better.
Lost Sheep
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