....I don't reload, I would LOVE to, but I'm a student paying for university out of pocket - and it's not easy. .....
Then sell one of your present collection to fund the reloading setup for the rest. Seriously! The money you'll save over buying factory ammo once you're set up will more than pay for the reloading setup if you shoot much at all. With your collection of high priced ammo hounds the break even point would be ridiculously short term for a simple setup as described above given the cost of the rounds you're buying at present. Basically you can't afford to NOT to get into reloading.
But I hear you about the lever gun. They really do have a sense of class all their own. When plinking it's not just about the shots themselves, it's about how you have to interact with the gun to achieve the shots. For some of the ability to just squeeze quickly gives the giggles needed. For others there's something magical about the feel of levering the next round into place. Or the historical connection of bolting a round of .303British into an honest to God WW1 or WW2 Lee Enfield. Or the reverence of sliding that torpedo like extra long 45-70 round into a single shot falling block Sharps. THAT is what plinking is all about. If you're not a semi sort of fellow then it doesn't matter how cheap it is since it won't give you the grin that the right sort of gun will give you. You need to figure out what you want out of a plinker and go that way.
But in the meantime really stop and take stock of how much you've shot those other rifles over the past couple of years and what it has cost you. Then look around at simple reloading setups and add up what they cost. Then add in what you'll pay for factory ammo for an often shot plinker and that'll tip you if nothing else does.
But part of me wants to say that if you're a struggling student with that sort of rifle collection then I'd suggest that you've got your priorities a little mixed up or you're not as hard up for money as you say. Even if you got the guns for cheap it costs plenty to feed them more than a few boxes per year. And since .30-30 at $17 for 20 didn't scare you financially I have to consider the old Shakespear quote of "I think he dost protest too much". Most starving students would be happy to have a semi decent .22 and money to buy ammo for it to go out plinking.


















































