Hope you’re all having a great summer!
We will be upgrading our servers on Wednesday, August 17. We anticipate downtime for 1 day.
We’ll look forward to seeing you again on Thursday, and catching up on your thoughts, questions and photos once we’re back online!
I've been reloading .375H&H on an old pacific press that works but it sure is hard work, hand ends up bruised every time. Any recommendations on a press with better leverage for the bigger cases?
What about looking for one on the 'older' RCBS Rock Chucker presses? I have two of them and they have done every well. The largest cailber that I have loaded on mine has been the 459 WM, so I am not sure what the differnece would be, compared to your 375 H&H.
Any relatively modern single stage should serve you well. Always hard to go wrong with a plain jane Rockchucker. I'm loving my newer Redding T-7 though; highly recommended.
...he who knows nothing is nearer to truth than he whose mind is filled with falsehoods & errors. ~Thomas Jefferson
I would rather have a mind opened by wonder than one closed by belief. ~Gerry Spence
The last thing Alaska needs is another bigot. ~member Catch It
Great spirits have always found violent opposition from mediocre minds. The latter cannot understand it when a man does not thoughtlessly submit to hereditary prejudices but honestly and courageously uses his intelligence. Albert Einstein
Better living through chemistry (I'm a chemist)
You can piddle with the puppies, or run with the wolves...
Have you looked at the Lyman T-Mag? It is a turret press. I have had it for years. I will never buy a single stage press again. I enen use one for my comercial ammo business for small runs or obscure rounds. I have loaded 340 Wby, RUMs, 460 Wby on it and never have a problem. Allows you to leave your seater dies in the tool head as well.
Another vote for the co-ax, my rockchucker collects dust after I got the co-ax.
Those that are successful in Alaska are those who are flexible, and allow the reality of life in Alaska to shape their dreams, vs. trying to force their dreams on the reality of Alaska.
If you have a tenuous grasp of reality, Alaska is not for you.
I like the co-ax not because it's expensive, I like it because IMHO it's the finest single stage press you can buy. I had a Lyman t-mag with 5 turrets, but sold it after getting the co-ax. With the co-ax you can slide dies in and out just as fast as twisting a turret, but you don't have to buy extra turrets or spend the time changing them out. Also the co-ax shell holder jaws are faster than a conventional shell holder and the shell and die "floats" so that the case self aligns in the die.
Those that are successful in Alaska are those who are flexible, and allow the reality of life in Alaska to shape their dreams, vs. trying to force their dreams on the reality of Alaska.
If you have a tenuous grasp of reality, Alaska is not for you.
Comment