Hey all.
I'm making the switch from smallbore to fullbore and would like to start reloading (for accuracy mostly, but also budget).
Will be shooting strictly .308 (with a slight possibility of .223 or 9mm) in the future.
Everyone I ask gives me a different opinion on a start up set-up.
I have a sturdy bench and a place to store ammo and components.
What is a good (budgetish) system that I won't out grow (too soon?)?
Thanks again.
There is a reason we have dozens of items in the reloading world. All serve a purpose with varying degrees of performance and value. Some will buy because of brand/reputation, some because of function, some because of cost.
Ask your question to shooters from different disciplines of precision/accuracy shooting and you will also get a range of answers. However, experienced shooters/reloaders all have similar goals even if their tooling and process may vary slightly.
I think the question you need to ask is value vs performance (more importantly, you budget). Cheap that doesn't work is very expensive. Some tools for certain jobs can cost very little dollars... some tools will simply cost what it costs to get that task done.
My first suggestion is get a reloading manual... yes a book with real paper in it. If accuracy is the main goal, consider the Berger and Sierra manuals. Now read and understand the reloading process and the goal of each step... when you understand the steps, the tooling become much easier to understand and what are better at performing certain jobs.
Shooter opinions make more sense when you understand their frame of reference and the possible "why" behind their choice.
I offer ALL the stuff from all major brands yet I am very selective on the tools I use. For my reloading, I have gear from pretty much every major brand where I pick and choose the best tooling to do each task.
There are starter kits but ultimately if true accuracy is the goal, false economy. No one company makes all the tooling to do every step well. In fact, sometimes you have to look outside the reloading world to get the better tools.
Decide on what accuracy means to you and the performance you want to strive for (where you want to start and then the level you want to reach), then the platforms you want to shoot and then your budget.
It doesn't have to cost a huge amount of money but you will certainly be spending "enough".
email if you want my gear list.
YMMV
Jerry