For full resize w/expander ball for semi-auto 223.
Tumble fired cases (corncobb + Rapid Polish [no walnut ==no dust... Thank you Murray Gardner for this tip])
Lube cases w/Dillon case lube.
Presently $23 spare toolhead.
ST#1 Regular Dillon non-carbide 223 sizer w/carbide ball. Remove the primer bar lever; just let the bar sit sprung in the forward position. Lots of primer crud will fall on it. Clean up with Varsol.
ST#2,3,4, empty.
Go nuts resizing and indexing. Just let the sized/deprimed cases fall into a bin after ST#4.
I tumble these cases in a separate batch of corncobb.
These sized cases all get checked in a Dillon gauge to see if neck needs trimming; generally I get 3-4 reloads before trimming is needed. There are however about 5-10% that need trimming each batch. I'm doing about 500 cases per batch.
I managed to get an acceptable system going with the Lee ball cutter and a cordless screwdriver running the Lee shellholder. Requires gloves, pliers to tighten the shellholder, a Wilson chamfer/deburr doodad, and blind determination. A smarter man would sell a kidney and get a Giraud.
About now you swear you'll never ##### about loading pistol ammo ever again.
Loading:
Cases are fully prepped and un-lubed, ready for loading. 550 has been cleaned of primer crud and lube that got everywhere. Primer bar lever is re-attached.
Different toolhead.
ST#1 A generic Lee universal decapping die $11 to knock out the piece of media that will be stuck in about 15%-20% of the flash holes. Cases are primed here like normal.
ST#2 Regular Dillon powder die/funnel
ST#3 Dillon seating die. If you're running compressed loads of, say. Varget, this die will leave a ring indentation on the ogive of your expensive 75-77 grainers. The big buck Redding Comp seating die is the expensive solution to this. There may be cheaper seating dies that don't leave a ring. My uncompressed loads are okay with the Dillon seater.
ST#4 Empty "Friends don't let friends crimp rifle ammo". Even bulk cannelured 55's. Forget the crimp.
Do not use Federal 223 brass. Even after the first firing, the primer pockets won't hold a primer properly and you'll have scary pressure rings at the web. Throw that s**t out. Just get Winchester and be happy.