Good Morning Mo!
I am a recent convert to rolling my own and have definitely found myself fairly deep in the Rabbit Hole. I spent a lot of time on this site trying to be a sponge. Great bunch of folks on here.
1. Jim's list on Backfire is a good place to start. Guys tend to be polarized on him but his advice on what you need to get started is pretty sound.
2. If you are a "Tool Guy" be prepared to exceed whatever budget you thought you had set.
3. Precision is a relative scale and is a slippery slope.
4. Like many technical pursuits, Speed, Accuracy, and Budget Friendly rarely all occur together.
5. Anticipate that what you thought was "good enough" will change with time at the reloading bench and at the range.
6. Go slow but at some point acknowledge that jumping in is all that is left to do.
After a few hundred rounds I identified steps in the process where variability was obvious and mostly due to my own hand or feel, or just the nature of a certain tool. I've spent my life doing a lot of building where a 35' tape measure, a Speed Square, and a level got the job done. Measurements down to .000 with calipers hurts my head and is stretching my brain. Definitely a case of an old dog working to learn a new trick.
As many others have said, reloading has turned into something I really enjoy. The time at the bench is therapeutic and when the rifles shoot well out in the field it is very satisfying.
Anyway, welcome to the Rabbit Hole.
I am a recent convert to rolling my own and have definitely found myself fairly deep in the Rabbit Hole. I spent a lot of time on this site trying to be a sponge. Great bunch of folks on here.
1. Jim's list on Backfire is a good place to start. Guys tend to be polarized on him but his advice on what you need to get started is pretty sound.
2. If you are a "Tool Guy" be prepared to exceed whatever budget you thought you had set.
3. Precision is a relative scale and is a slippery slope.
4. Like many technical pursuits, Speed, Accuracy, and Budget Friendly rarely all occur together.
5. Anticipate that what you thought was "good enough" will change with time at the reloading bench and at the range.
6. Go slow but at some point acknowledge that jumping in is all that is left to do.
After a few hundred rounds I identified steps in the process where variability was obvious and mostly due to my own hand or feel, or just the nature of a certain tool. I've spent my life doing a lot of building where a 35' tape measure, a Speed Square, and a level got the job done. Measurements down to .000 with calipers hurts my head and is stretching my brain. Definitely a case of an old dog working to learn a new trick.
As many others have said, reloading has turned into something I really enjoy. The time at the bench is therapeutic and when the rifles shoot well out in the field it is very satisfying.
Anyway, welcome to the Rabbit Hole.