With ammo hard to find, and with the rebellion upon us, was thinking of getting into reloading. How many 100s or 1,000s of round does it take for the economics of it to make sense?
With ammo hard to find, and with the rebellion upon us, was thinking of getting into reloading. How many 100s or 1,000s of round does it take for the economics of it to make sense?
Best advice I can tell you is unless you shoot a lot every year then don't worry about reloading.With ammo hard to find, and with the rebellion upon us, was thinking of getting into reloading. How many 100s or 1,000s of round does it take for the economics of it to make sense?
With ammo hard to find, and with the rebellion upon us, was thinking of getting into reloading. How many 100s or 1,000s of round does it take for the economics of it to make sense? I got into reloading for my 28 Nosler, 400 rounds made it worth it. I now reload 3006, 243, 6.5 Creedmoor 6.5 prc and 224 Valkyrie but it's not addicting
Instead of looking at the cost savings of reloading....you might want to think about the entertainment and enjoyment value you might get from reloading.
I get a lot of enjoyment from reloading and shooting my loads for precision rifles.
The upgrading thing is what costs me the most $$$. Buying, selling, buying, selling. I really want one of the new Area 419 presses, called The ZERO. It's only $1,200. It probably can't do anything my Forster Co-Ax and/or Dillon XL 750 can't do. For me it's a hobby and I love gadgets and trying new things.If you can resist the urge to constantly upgrade your gear, and are happy with ammo that shoots MOA at 200, AND you shoot expensive ammo, (I just saw 338 Federal on sale for $65.00 per box of 20), then you could make your investment back in less than 1,000 rounds. (That would be $3,250 in ammo).
Buy a single stage press kit, 8lbs of your favorite powder, 1,000 primers, and a set of std. dies.
You can make decent ammo like that.
Now is actually a great time to research the loads and components and all the great info here, specific to your caliber.With ammo hard to find, and with the rebellion upon us, was thinking of getting into reloading. How many 100s or 1,000s of round does it take for the economics of it to make sense?