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Practically Shooting

Arkie_Lefty

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Posts posted by Arkie_Lefty

  1. Carbide rifle die is really unlikely. Look at a carbide pistol die. It's straight wall, and die only has a small (different looking) carbide insert right at the mouth. A die for tapered wall rifle case would have to be carbide in neck, taper, and base areas, basically all carbide. These can run several hundred dollars, and are usually used only by volume commercial reloaders where removing lube would be unfeasible.

    For any interested, Dillon case lube is really good and doesn't "poison" powders like conventional petro based lubes do.

    Bob

  2. .40 S&W mostly, I also shoot a .22-250.

    I'm looking at it for economy. If I buy .40 S&W rounds locally I can get 50 reloads for $20, Russian "new" for $25 and "cheap" new USA stuff for $30. .22-250 is around $28 a box. Soon Calif. will not allow mail order due to a new law requiring a signature for handgun ammo. I can foresee prices going higher.

    In that case it's simple enough! RCBS Rock Chucker for rifle, Dillon for everything else! grin

    Bob

  3. Crash, that seems a lot of trouble to clean brass, compared to plain old tumbling with media?

    Have you tried setting that "excessively dirty" fluid aside for a couple weeks to see what it looks like after all the solids settle out? I'm betting it'd just have a stain and still be perfectly useable.

    Far as use on guns, I'll bet it'd be the cats arse for carbon rings on revolver cylinders.

    Bob

  4. What you plan to reload really does enter in here. Pistol, you can achieve much greater accuracy than 99 out of 100 handguns can attain with a progressive. Also greater than 999 out of a thousand shooters can attain. And you'll soon be itching to build ammo quickly.

    Rifle is a bit different, because other than prarie dog shooting most folks just don't do that much rifle shooting. For practice, hunting, target shooting etc the slower pace, and individual round control of a single stage might be perfectly ok.

    What are you planning to load for?

    Bob

  5. Buying a Hornady a mistake? Nah, I don't think so... just like anything mechanical, there's bound to be various issues here and there...

    I think that people have as fierce of loyalties to their reloading equipment brands as they do their automobiles! Such is life.

    I DON'T OWN A DILLON! Hindsight is excellent though.

    Bob

  6. BACK HOME!!!

    Not too bad a drive, roads all clear. Never had a cop hit me with "instant on" radar, and it's a darn good thing! Valentine detector picks up "full time on" units MILES before they get a reading.

    Gonna have one of them STI widebody frames if it harelips every cow in Texas! 38super (what I'll get) or 9mm have 36 round capacity! No, of course I don't need it! When did that make any difference?

    Have a series 80 as new in box Colt that's got to go before that can happen though. 38 Super, also bbl and related parts to convert to 9mm if anyone is interested.

    Bob

  7. Left home Thurs evening and drove to Crete NE to spend a few days visiting with my nephew who works with Mr. Bob Marvel.

    Yesterday Joe took me by to meet Mr. Marvel and tour his shop. These guys build some of the finest, most beautiful custom 1911 pistols on the face of this earth. Mr Marvel interrupted his work and spent several hours visiting. He's a very cordial fellow with intellect bordering on pure genius, and a grasp of how mechanical things "work" that most of us will never dream possible.

    Visited a nearby Cabellas, and have had an excellent visit. NOW if it'll just quit snowing and all the roads clear so I can get back to Arkansas!

    Bob

  8. Saiga, Personally I'd prefer a more AK like version, but still years ahead of an SKS. Be certain it has the metal scope base mounting attachment already welded to the receiver. Makes base mounting SO much easier.

    Gave my last SKS to a nephew who killed his first deer with it.

    Bob

  9. "It's so light that I fully expect it to have some bite to it. But that's OK." Scotty

    Don't jump to foregone conclusions 'till you've actually shot that little beast! They are excellent carry guns,,as long as you don't plan to actually practice much.

    A friend who's the most committed gun nut I've ever known plays around with 45/70's experimenting with loads. Builds 1911's from raw parts. His wife wears something on her hip anytime she's working in the yard, flowers, garden, or just sitting on the back deck, shoots copperheads, 'dillers, etc. Between them they kept a LCR less than a month. Loads that were comfortable for much practice were too weak for anything else.

    Bob

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