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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
New press opinions
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<blockquote data-quote="victor3ranger" data-source="post: 2865564" data-attributes="member: 127035"><p>I have never owned a turret press of any kind.</p><p>I had a friend that swore by them and would crank out piles of ammo and we never really shot targets to see who was better until one day he was challenging me, I was a little reluctant since he shot all the time, way more bullets down range than me.</p><p>When the shooting started he was hitting the targets all over the place and mine were in small tight groups.</p><p>Same thing happened with the rifles.</p><p>About a year later he asked me to help him with a 270 that blew apart at the range.</p><p>I started with his ammo by measuring each one and pulling them down to weigh the powder.</p><p>What I found was his powder charges were all over the place and the bullets were seated all different. </p><p>I would rather be slow and have ammo that's as exact as possible.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="victor3ranger, post: 2865564, member: 127035"] I have never owned a turret press of any kind. I had a friend that swore by them and would crank out piles of ammo and we never really shot targets to see who was better until one day he was challenging me, I was a little reluctant since he shot all the time, way more bullets down range than me. When the shooting started he was hitting the targets all over the place and mine were in small tight groups. Same thing happened with the rifles. About a year later he asked me to help him with a 270 that blew apart at the range. I started with his ammo by measuring each one and pulling them down to weigh the powder. What I found was his powder charges were all over the place and the bullets were seated all different. I would rather be slow and have ammo that’s as exact as possible. [/QUOTE]
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