Thank you. I'm interested in a Dillon 650, but it will depend what I can get it for. The 550b is definitely a step down, but time is on my side and despite it being slower, it seems to save quite a bit of money at the start.
I started with a 550 myself
Regret selling it i should of kept it
Again in my opinion, 550 is one of the good progressive presses, that 1. Supports the most caliber 2. Takes the less time to switch between calibers 3.that conversions for different calibers is more affordable (within the dillon lineup) and 4. That is the safest progressive press for a new guy, since it doesn’t auto-indexes, so as a new reloader you can take your time to see what’s going on when theres a malfunction or whatever
2018 is a big year for me, with many cool new guns making the market, i won’t get to half of what i want to buy.
In 2019 i am getting a 550 in my gun room for sure.
Currently own and run
Dillon 650 for volume 9mm/40SW
Lee cast single stage for precision long range 308 and future 6.5 caliber of some sort
And future 550 would serve casual low volume calibers, as in semi auto pre-prepped brass .223, 357 magnum, 45 auto or any other caliber i wish to casually plink with
If you are at the range once to twice a week, these presses pay for themselves pretty quickly.
As of right now, my 2017 volume was, and 2018 volume will ressemble it a lot : 15-16K 9mm, 1200 .308
In 308 my equipment will self pay for itself quickly at savings of over 1.50$ per shot for match ammo.
In 9mm, it can take 2-3 years pay off the dillon stuff (also own a dillon auto primer tube filler), but custom catering ammo to specific guns for power or profile, is something i value very much
Fyi, in the years of my 550, with propper accessories (which are also 650 compatible if ever you upgrade later), i would crank very close to 550x 9mm rounds per hour on a good day. I am one of the voters for dillon, and one of those that love the 550.