Dies interchange between brands of presses ?

skneub

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I want to buy the things I need to get into reloading.
I plan to reload for my fake webley..:rolleyes:

.303 that will need resized overall length
30/06
And who knows what else I will end up buying lol:rolleyes:

I bought a set of lee dies for the Webley off ebay lol

Want to do this right, I am not gonna be running thousands of rounds at a time, but want decent quality

So , am I stuck with a lee press ? for these dies.

Feel free to advise on what I need to buy.
This is totally new to me

Have been told a redding t7 turret press is good.
 
As long as the dies and press are both threaded 7/8 x 14, you're good to go.

you're not stuck with a Lee press. I'm using Lee, RCBS, Hornady, Redding dies in both RCBS and Lee presses
 
99% of dies use standard 7/8-14 thread (7/8" major diameter, 14 threads per inch, also known as 7/8 NF or National Fine as it's a standardized thread) so are completely interchangeable. Even the shell holders that snap onto the ram are usually interchangeable between brands. The only dies I've heard of that aren't interchangeable are the large format dies for things like some of the larger elephant cartridges and .50BMG and some odd ball Dillon dies from decades past that they used a non-standard thread for some reason or another.

You can get a Lee press, or an RCBS, or a Dillon, or ... you get the idea.
I'm currently using an RCBS Partner Press. It's their smallest one which suits me fine as I have it bolted to some 2x4's and clamp it to a desk when I want to reload. I live in an apartment so it's best for my situation.

Most brands sell starter sets that include almost everything you need. They are usually just lacking a case trimmer and of course dies. Sometimes you save almost nothing over buying the components individually, sometimes you save a lot, you'll have to check by adding up the individual components.
Any of the US brands have very good to downright amazing customer service so it's hard to go wrong even with the low end stuff (usually considered to be Lee).
Redding makes very good products and their T7 turret press is excellent. Personally to get started I'd just get a single stage as they're usually quite a bit less expensive and if you are doing low production like you describe you don't really need a turret or progressive press.

I'd pick up a reloading manual or two and read the front sections at least once or twice. They usually cover a basic introduction to reloading.
Another book I found useful when I was getting started as "The ABC's of Reloading". It doesn't have any load data but is an excellent introduction to reloading.

Going through my reloading process in my head I use the following items (not brand specific):
-tumbler to clean the brass (dry media, stainless pins, or ultrasonic; all have their pros and cons)
-press
-die set (full length sizing, neck sizing, bullet seating and crimping, Lee factory crimp die)
-case trimmer
-deburring tool (trimming leaves burs in and out of the case mouth)
-hand primer (most presses have a priming tool built in but a hand primer is faster)
-an accurate scale (cheap digital scales have huge tolerances on them and can't be trusted; go balance beam or premium digital)
-caliper (measures things down to .001")
 
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There are several presses that will accept the same diameter thread as what is on Lee dies.

RCBS, Hornady, Redding etc. Most are pretty much standard.


Lee presses are OK. Some people love them.

Personally, I prefer a more rigid cast steel press, like RCBS, Redding, Hornady and Pacific. There are others out there as well. I don't know if Lee still makes their cast steel press. I have an old one here and it is a great press.

If you are going to shoot one cartridge a lot or even just a couple of them, you might be interested in a progressive press or a turret press.

Do your own DD. Usually with presses as well as dies, you get exactly what you pay for.
 
Personally, I prefer a more rigid cast steel press, like RCBS, Redding, Hornady and Pacific. There are others out there as well. I don't know if Lee still makes their cast steel press. I have an old one here and it is a great press.
Lee rereleased their "classic cast" press a number of years ago which is a cast iron press just like the RCBS Rock Chucker and most other ones.
The Partner Press I use from RCBS is cast aluminum and has been flawless so far.
I did have the Lee cast aluminum "C" shaped press (instead of an enclosed "O" shape) and it cracked at the base after a couple thousand rounds. It was only $27 so I guess I shouldn't be surprised.
 
Look into a beginner's kit and buy a copy of The ABC's of Reloading. The kits come with everything you need to get started less dies and shell holder. Run around $500.
Biggest difference between one brand and another is the warrantee. RCBS, for example, covers anything and everything for the entire life of the product. Not who bought it, even if you caused the damage(very hard to do any damage but excrement happens). They will fix or usually replace anything including de-capping pins with a phone call, no questions asked other than your mailing address, forever. Even if you buy used kit. Of course you pay a bit more for RCBS kit.
Lee's warrantee is limited to 2 years. And they want you to return stuff to them if it does get damaged. Still hard stuff to break, but low end castings do.
Lyman, I think it was, made a press years ago that used a smaller diameter thread than the 7/8-14, but it's gone.
 
Lee rereleased their "classic cast" press a number of years ago which is a cast iron press just like the RCBS Rock Chucker and most other ones.
The Partner Press I use from RCBS is cast aluminum and has been flawless so far.
I did have the Lee cast aluminum "C" shaped press (instead of an enclosed "O" shape) and it cracked at the base after a couple thousand rounds. It was only $27 so I guess I shouldn't be surprised.

what were you loading with the C press out of curiosity? i've done 1100+ 500mag, couple thousand of 9mm, 45 and 357mag and so far so good.
 
Have a Forster press with all but one set of Lee dies. 9MM, 38/357, 45 ACP and 223 all is good just add adapter rings @ $4.00 ea and pop in pop out for die changes.
 
what were you loading with the C press out of curiosity? i've done 1100+ 500mag, couple thousand of 9mm, 45 and 357mag and so far so good.
.308, .303B, .300WM, 6.5x55, .44 mag, and maybe 7.62x54R? I don't remember exactly what I was loading back then.
Maybe I just got a dud that had a flaw or something. I've heard several people say they've had similar experiences to you.

I think I was resizing some IVI 7.62 at the time that may have been fired in a machine gun. They where really blown out and incredibly hard to full length size. After the press cracked I just tossed the brass because it was just too damn hard to resize no matter what press it was in. I think I might have also ripped a rim or two off of the cases; it was a while ago.
 
There isn't much wrong with the Lee set.
It has a solid press that'll last longer than you will.
The powder thrower is okay for plinking ammo but I found it to have up to a variance of up to +/- 0.5gr on charges (a 50gr charge will come out between 49.5gr and 50.5gr). For accurate loads I generally want +/- 0.1gr per charge.
The Lee scale gets a lot of flak for being cheap and "useless" according to some but I've compared mine against several much more expensive scales and it's accurate. It's just finicky and can be frustrating to use.
 
Sweet :)
The ammo I will be makeing is just plinking ammo.
we dont shoot competition at all
Hunting ammo , well might eventualy load for the 30/06.
But generaly the game is close and factory ammo has been getting the job done.

I have a caliper for mesuring cases (lol gotta brush up on reading it)
Sounds like I need a tumbler and some powder, primers and projectiles.

I guess also some reading material ;-)
Lots of that to do still

There isn't much wrong with the Lee set.
It has a solid press that'll last longer than you will.
The powder thrower is okay for plinking ammo but I found it to have up to a variance of up to +/- 0.5gr on charges (a 50gr charge will come out between 49.5gr and 50.5gr). For accurate loads I generally want +/- 0.1gr per charge.
The Lee scale gets a lot of flak for being cheap and "useless" according to some but I've compared mine against several much more expensive scales and it's accurate. It's just finicky and can be frustrating to use.
 
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