Brad Quarnberg
Well-Known Member
My Dad taught me to reload. At a young age. I was fascinated by him taking a bunch of components, putting them together and making fully loaded cartridges. I took over reloading duties when I was about 15 after several years of his tutelage and oversight. For me, it was a way to be able to shoot more at significantly lesser cost over factory ammo. I learned a lot about bullet performance and which bullets were really not ones I wanted to use on deer or elk, and which would explode on impact dropping coyotes and rabbits in their tracks.
I have taught several friends and relatives to reload and now that my son is closer, I'll pick up where we left off many years ago and pass the skill on.
To those just getting started, I'll tell you what my Dad had when I first started (I still have and use his equipment sometimes). He had an RCBS press, balance scale (I use an electric one now but still have the one he used), a uniflow powder measure, a debur tool, and the dies/shell holders. We didn't have a case trimmer and still got away with loading cases many times before they started to show signs they were getting to old to use.
We had no tumbler. Our cases were picked up and wiped down after each outing, and we only shot them in one or two guns. It wasn't a hard process and we certainly weren't concerned about bug holes on the range: the purpose was to put meat in the freezer. In fact, my Dad seldom shot more than a few rounds each year. One to make sure his gun was hitting where it was supposed to and then a bullet for each deer or elk he shot at. Did he miss, yes, but it was a rarity.
You don't need a lot of equipment to start reloading and the satisfaction of seeing the end product working the way you want it to is satisfying.
I have taught several friends and relatives to reload and now that my son is closer, I'll pick up where we left off many years ago and pass the skill on.
To those just getting started, I'll tell you what my Dad had when I first started (I still have and use his equipment sometimes). He had an RCBS press, balance scale (I use an electric one now but still have the one he used), a uniflow powder measure, a debur tool, and the dies/shell holders. We didn't have a case trimmer and still got away with loading cases many times before they started to show signs they were getting to old to use.
We had no tumbler. Our cases were picked up and wiped down after each outing, and we only shot them in one or two guns. It wasn't a hard process and we certainly weren't concerned about bug holes on the range: the purpose was to put meat in the freezer. In fact, my Dad seldom shot more than a few rounds each year. One to make sure his gun was hitting where it was supposed to and then a bullet for each deer or elk he shot at. Did he miss, yes, but it was a rarity.
You don't need a lot of equipment to start reloading and the satisfaction of seeing the end product working the way you want it to is satisfying.