Obviously I'm missing something and as such, I fail to see the relevance.
I'm guessing he will make a statement about the intended use, ie brush hunting, and the original question about the grade of dies required, ie. competition dies.
Just a guess.
Obviously I'm missing something and as such, I fail to see the relevance.
Assuming you are interested in finding relevance:Obviously I'm missing something and as such, I fail to see the relevance.
Assuming you are interested in finding relevance:
- benchrest shooting would normally be done from either custom dies or Wilson dies with an arbour press.
- Hunting big game in brush implies a lesser standard of accuracy, so one could use any regular die that was robust. here, Lee dies with the "unbreakable" (not really) decapping rod work well.
- Long-range target shooting might imply extensive brass preparation and a custom barrel, suggesting a good bushing die like a Redding.
- Regular fiddling with loads would imply easy adjustability, which suggests micrometer-topped seating dies (redding, hornady, etc.).
And so on. The type of gun, the type of shooting, and the shooters pocket book and desire for perfection vs simple value vs appearance (Dillon dies have a beautiful anti-corrosion coating) play into the choice of dies.
Unless you use a "fitted neck" with turned brass in a benchrest-quality chamber, you always have to resize at least the neck. And you have to have "expensive" or some other type of die even here, for brass prep and the occasional shoulder-bump.why use expensive dies if you don't need to resize?