press

For bottle neck rifle cases I wouldn't get a turret press. To my way of thinking they are just not solid enough. And for hard to size cases, like some magnums, I wouldn't even dream of using a turret.
This is my thinking. Many of you may think opposite, but that is OK, if we all thought the same, they could build only one type of tool for us.
 
For bottle neck rifle cases I wouldn't get a turret press. To my way of thinking they are just not solid enough. And for hard to size cases, like some magnums, I wouldn't even dream of using a turret.
This is my thinking. Many of you may think opposite, but that is OK, if we all thought the same, they could build only one type of tool for us.

i only use mine for pistol calibers probably should have mentioned that :p
 
For bottle neck rifle cases I wouldn't get a turret press. To my way of thinking they are just not solid enough. And for hard to size cases, like some magnums, I wouldn't even dream of using a turret.
This is my thinking. Many of you may think opposite, but that is OK, if we all thought the same, they could build only one type of tool for us.

I agree I just started loading 30-30 and the stroke isnt long enough to clear the decapper without some fidling. I stopped using it as a progressive and remove the indexer so it works like a single stage without havng to change dies just rotate.

For pistol cases this thing is the best deal out there. I have had mine about a year with no issues at all, and love it.
 
Lee pro 1000 for pistol and small rifle cases. Best bang for buck. Got mine from natchezz in the states for $149. Keep her clean and she will run "forever".
 
I have expensive presses and "cheap" lee turrets too. I have loaded the big boys on the lee just as easy on my Redding. For the dollar, Lee is hard to beat. What can you afford would be the deciding factor.
 
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