hey Hotwheels, my friend that reloads ran the numbers and the savings add up quickly to pay for the gear vs. factory ammo, even if it's case lot.
at $170/1000 with reloading, and $300/1000 factory, the costs to get the gear would equalize within a year if you shot a case worth of 9mm every month.
the only thing that is hard to quantify is the value of your time taken/used to do the loading. if you enjoy it as a hobby, like the shooting itself, time is immaterial...however, if you'd be making more money doing whatever it is you do than the savings, obviously you'd need to rethink your position.![]()

HOLY HELL is the 650 big! damn thing would take up more space than I have to stand in my kitchen!
I live in a 'tiny' bachelor pad. by tiny I mean that I've got about 330sqft including kitchen & bathroom.
my usable living space is 11' x 16', so I use it wisely and sparingly...![]()
hey Hotwheels, my friend that reloads ran the numbers and the savings add up quickly to pay for the gear vs. factory ammo, even if it's case lot.
at $170/1000 with reloading, and $300/1000 factory, the costs to get the gear would equalize within a year if you shot a case worth of 9mm every month.
the only thing that is hard to quantify is the value of your time taken/used to do the loading. if you enjoy it as a hobby, like the shooting itself, time is immaterial...however, if you'd be making more money doing whatever it is you do than the savings, obviously you'd need to rethink your position.![]()
Hands down the Dillon 650. Go big or go home!!!
I started reloading with this press and have never looked back. I reload 9mm, 45acp, 38spl, 44 mag, 357 mag, and 223. I mostly shoot 45acp and can load 100 rds. in 7 minutes.
hey Hotwheels, my friend that reloads ran the numbers and the savings add up quickly to pay for the gear vs. factory ammo, even if it's case lot.
at $170/1000 with reloading, and $300/1000 factory, the costs to get the gear would equalize within a year if you shot a case worth of 9mm every month.
the only thing that is hard to quantify is the value of your time taken/used to do the loading. if you enjoy it as a hobby, like the shooting itself, time is immaterial...however, if you'd be making more money doing whatever it is you do than the savings, obviously you'd need to rethink your position.![]()
if you enjoy it as a hobby, like the shooting itself, time is immaterial...however, if you'd be making more money doing whatever it is you do than the savings, obviously you'd need to rethink your position.![]()
hey Hotwheels, my friend that reloads ran the numbers and the savings add up quickly to pay for the gear vs. factory ammo, even if it's case lot.
at $170/1000 with reloading, and $300/1000 factory, the costs to get the gear would equalize within a year if you shot a case worth of 9mm every month.
the only thing that is hard to quantify is the value of your time taken/used to do the loading. if you enjoy it as a hobby, like the shooting itself, time is immaterial...however, if you'd be making more money doing whatever it is you do than the savings, obviously you'd need to rethink your position.![]()
You have some good points, with 9mm costing about 20 cents a round, you have to find out how much its worth to you before you invest in all the equipment.
I'd buy case lot 9mm before I bought a progressive just for that purpose... The $1000+ beans it'll cost you to get into it buys a sore trigger fingers worth of 9mm...
Buuuut I'm not one to do things that way either so I bough a 650 and loaded lots of 9mm with cast and played bullets... But I use it primarily for .223 these days.
If you load a lot of caliber's you'll be way farther ahead with a 550B in the cost of conversion kits alone, if you just want to load pistol rounds then look at the SDB...
Nobody "needs" a 1050... Or a Porsche... Or... Or... Or...
I reload on a Dillon 550...Some people complain about it's manual indexing, but I look at it as being another type of reloading press: a single stage....It comes in very handy for reloading Black Powder cartridges like the 45-70...
$1,000 is only about three cases, give or take, of 9mm ammo, depending on whether you are buying factory ammo or commercial reloads. Assuming $300/k for commercial reloads versus $160/k component costs to reload with plated bullets, the cost savings will pay for $1,000 worth of press ancillaries in about 7,000 rounds. This is a reasonable ballpark price for a Dillon 550. Figure about $1500 for a Dillon 650 for a break-even point of around 11,000 rounds. If you shoot 2 boxes/100 rounds a week, the 550 will have paid for itself in less than 18 months and the 650 in a bit over two years. Obviously, the more you shoot, the sooner you get your money's worth out of the machine. I would call that pretty cost-effective for equipment that should last for decades.
I'm happy with my 550 for ammo consumption in the range of hundreds of rounds per month. 500 rounds of pistol ammo in an hour is feasible, starting with pre-filled primer tubes. I also use it to load a variety of rifle and pistol calibres besides 9mm. If you want to load in larger volumes (or just spend less time reloading) and dedicate a press to one or two calibres, the 650 with case feeder would be the way to go.
This is a good summary of the different Dillon presses that goes into a little more detail:
http://www.brianenos.com/pages/dillon.html



























