Dillon Vs Lee Loader's

"Lee is entry level equipment, good value for the money in most cases. If you like cooey's , sks's and fuller tools, Lee is for you!"

That's just about the most dumb-assed statement so far in this thread....:rolleyes:

(Edited to reflect what I really think...)
 
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I know plenty of "Non" entry grade handloaders that use LEE equipment, some very serious handloaders use some LEE products, or have a LEE press or 2... so I wouldn't agree with that statement either....
 
I most certainly do not agree that Lee is cheap crap. I feel that I know a thing or two about reloading and use alot of Lee products.

Spend your money as you see fit. Mine does not go to fancy brands or overpriced, under performing bling.

Jerry
 
Lee is good stuff, there is nothing wrong with it. Sure you give up a little durability to other presses, but in return you get a much lower price point. The lee progesive is one of a few things that if you take care of youi get MORE than what you pay for. Keep it clean and lubed and it should last.

Myself I picked up a Hornady L'n'L and love it. Is it so much better than a lee? Not really, I just like the convience of quick caliber changes and the contructions. And all my other stuff is hornady:D . If I had started with Lee stuff, I'd probably have a lee!;)

Mostly the difference is equipment snobbery. And sure, Dillon will ship you anything that breaks, but your still down right? I like be able to drive to any one of the local gun shops that all carry either Hornady or Lee and get the part I need when I need it. And Hornady will still warantee it to boot!:cool:
 
Wow, just a touch on the condescending side, aren't you?

acrashb said:
As a personal observation, and I mean this in the spirit of constructive criticism, the tone and mistakes in your post reminds me of people who bought the 1994-1995 BMW R1100RS' motorcycles. After suffering recalls and out-of-pocket expenses to correct leaking rear drive vents, out-of-sync injectors, rapid wear of the right side of the front tires, terrible turbulence and noise from the tiny windscreen, and so on (I know the list by heart, as I have one), they continued to insist, with limited critical thought evident, that the BMW was the be-all and end-all of motorcycles. The phenomenon is a defense mechanism related to high-ticket items.

I think, as you've pointed out in your 'personal observation' you have me all wrong. There really is no 'tone' to my original post, I'm simply asking questions, and providing some rebuttle to your views in the write up. Your analogy of comparing fervent owners/riders of the BMW R1100 to me 'defending' Dillon is way off base, and quite frankly, it just doesn't make any sense.
FWIW, I have Lee, Hornady, RCBS, Lee Forsester, and Dillon Equipment, so I'm hardly an 'equipment snob'. I actually paid very little for my used Dillon equipment, so I'm not defending paying outlandish prices based on some 'phenomenon' either.

beltfed said:
Incidently, what came of the Dillon 650 you had?

acrashb said:
Please re-read the writeup more carefully: "I’ll miss the Dillon – finely-made equipment is a joy to have around.

:confused: Pardon me. Maybe I should have worded it 'Incidently, what will or has come of the Dillon 650 you currently have or had?'
Here's one better - Why wouldn't you just be civil, and answer the question?


beltfed said:
In no way did you see benefit to what Dillon offers.


acrashb said:
Yes, I did. Two examples, both in the conclusions:"The Dillon should, in principle, make more accurate ammo", and "Does the Lee allow for powder check and separate seat/crimp stations? No - if that's a show-stopper for you, you have to take the Dillon."

Other examples are left as an exercise for the reader.

Actually, what I meant (and I actually thought you would have read into my meaning by the bold text -no matter, I'll re-word it), was this:

While I thought your write up was generally well done, you make comparisons between the two with (arguably frivilous) titles such as 'primer feel', 'missed primers' & 'space', you clearly sidestep the main comparison, and (likely) the largest contributing factor for the higher initial costs of the Dillon equipment, which is as someone pointed out 'blindingly' obvious -the lifetime, no hassle warranty.

acrashb said:
Because the cost of acquiring the Dillon (and ancillary issues like acquiring a new calibre capability) is 3x the cost of acquiring the Lee. This is the only cost that we clearly know.

acrashb said:
It's blindingly obvious that post-acquisition costs will be lower due to the warranty issue, but it is completely opaque as to how much lower they will be, because I am unaware of any factual study of replacement rates for the various components on the two presses.

Really? What about this statement?
acrashb said:
One of my shooting buddies has two Loadmasters, one with nearly one million rounds through it and one closing in on six hundred thousand. He’s replaced a lot of wear parts, like the inexpensive wedge-lock bar (it advances and locks the shell plate).
I'm sure free of charge from Lee, Right?

While I would agree they are 'opaque' how can you dismiss the countless, first hand, substantiated stories of people having Dillon equipment replaced or repaired FREE of charge -not only on countless threads on this and other boards, but even in this thread?

acrashb said:
The 650 is mostly better (save for a few items described in the writeup). How much better? Not 3 times better, which reflects the price difference. A person who wants the best and can accept diminishing returns will go with a Dillon.

Who is claiming Dillon equipment is 'three times better'?
How is it exactly a 'diminishing return'?

If you have an axe to grind over Dillon prices and equipment, that's fine. If you are a steadfast Lee supporter, that's fine too, just don't insult my intellegence doing it.
 
I will claim Dillon is three times better. For me it is 100 times better, as I have had persoanl bad experience with Lee, first my 1000 then another single stage I bought, both crap, absolutly useless. I tried to get parts at my local gunshops, but they do not even like to deal with Lee as the service sucks, that is not the case with Dillon, you have a problem, they deal with it. My buddy has a Sqaure Deal B, it was not working correctly, the tech on the phone at Dillon walked him through everything from start to finish, 2.5 hours on the phone and not a reservation, and this was a unit purchased used, that is service, you sure would not get that from Lee or any Lee dealer. I quess it all boils down to personal preferance, and mine is for Dillon.
 
beltfed said:
Wow, just a touch on the condescending side, aren't you?[...]
Who is claiming Dillon equipment is 'three times better'?
How is it exactly a 'diminishing return'?
Wasn't trying to be. "Pedantic" might come across that way.

Anyone who charges n times more for one product than another is inherently making an n times 'better' claim.

A diminishing return is when you can spend, say, $500 on a laser printer that does 10 ppm, or can spend $1000 for another laser printer that does 15 ppm. Each page per minute on the first one costs $50. Each page per minute on the second costs $66.67, so the second one (although clearly faster/better) has a diminishing return for the $500 more you spent to buy it, assuming that ppm is the critical attribute of the device. In this example, it would be better (all else being equal) to buy two of the first printers.

So, in my judgement and with my criteria and needs - others may be different - the Dillon is a case of diminishing return because it is 3x more expensive but not 3x 'better', again measured against my yardstick(s).
 
SandRoad said:
That said, I will probably get the Hornady Lock and Load progressive, with casefeeder, as a press for rifle cartridges, (even though the Loadmaster can load rifle cartridges)


Get one, you'll love it. I load handgun on mine, but it would be a very nice press for rifle. Its very smooth and ridged.

:D Better than Lee and Dillon:eek:

:p to you all!:D
 
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Where do I fit in? I hate the priming on the loadmaster, but can't justify spending the $$$ for the dillon.

As far as entry level reloading equipment goes I think that is an unfair accusation. I think entry level for an IPSC shooter would be a single stage press not a particular brand of press. Benchrest shooter entry level would be a C press or progressive as opposed to an O press.

Can't we all play together?
 
I loaded tens of thousands of rounds on Lee's crap, every time I used them I would be chanting in my head- someday I will get rid of this junk and get a Dillon press.

I now use a 550 dillon and am very happy, but if I hadn't got a great deal on it ,I think I would have bought a Hornaday lock n load, if I WAS PAYING RETAIL.

The hornaday is cheaper than the 550 and has all the features of the even more expensive 650. Plus the hornaday has one feature no Dillon press has, it is made of cast iron. Cast iron is much better at dampening vibrations, making for a smother operating press, as well as stronger. From what I have read on Brian Enos forum it is fairly common for heavily used 550's (100,000 plus rounds) to break the compuond leverage piece that transfers the energy from the handle to the ram. Dillon replaces it for free of course, but they do charge shipping for replacement parts for Canadains now.

RCBS makes a 550 clone that is made of cast iron I believe, but I have never seen one.
 
Cocked&Locked said:
Hornady, Get one, you'll love it. I load handgun on mine, but it would be a very nice press for rifle. Its very smooth and ridged.

:D Better than Lee and Dillon:eek:

:p to you all!:D

I will be keeping my Loadmaster and leaving it set up for 40S&W and 9mm. (no plate change needed, just dies) The Hornady will be used for other calibers.

I have had little trouble with my Loadmaster and in line with what acrashb has posted, I just can't justify spending the money on a Dillon 650, plus extras needed for caliber changes.

Caliber changes on the Hornady are much cheaper than on a Dillon 650. I have also managed to pick up 5 used shellplates for the Hornady and I don't even have the press yet.
 
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My 2 Cents:
Bought a LEE turret press / auto index & powder measure back in 1988. This April the right side linkage thingy broke. E-mailed LEE and they sent me the new steel one piece replacement FREE OF CHARGE. I'm not a high volume loader but do load 5 pistol calibres. Love the extra turrets! For what I do I just can't complain.
 
I have a Lee1000 and load for 5 calibers. It is nice to just swap out the die holder and changing plates is quick, adjust the case feeder and away you go. Most of the problems with the 1000 that I have run into are associated with the powder measure. If you are using Unique or some other big flake powder there is no problem, 2400 will leak out of the side of the hopper and down into the primer tray and jam things up. I bought a whole new powder measure form lee because my old one was used and worn out so I sprang for the new one. Exactly the same problem and I can't do 2400 or any fine powder loading on it. The second grip I have is no low powder/double powder warning system. Some how I got a primer in my W231 bottle and when I pored the powder in the hopper of course I didn't notice it. I loaded 2 boxes of ammo for some plinking and when I got to the range I had a squib load. The bullet didn't get stuck but that is the first time in 25 years of loading that ever happened. Then my son was shooting and same thing. When I got home I started to investigate further and noticed that about every 5th round the powder was less than normal. Finally found the primer was sometimes blocking the powder from dumping. It was my fault but if you are looking for a new progressive then I would take this into consideration also. I am so paranoid now that when I seat the bullet I always look at each round to see if the powder is there and that takes alot of extra time. I don't load much, maybe 3000 a year at the most but I take alot of friends to the range to introduce them to our sport and all I need is a missed powder in a revolver. I couldn't justify the 1400.00 I would have to spend on the Dillion equipment to do the same thing as 300.00 on the lee stuff. My 2 cents.
 
Dealers?

Hi,

Great thread.

I'll be getting into handgun ammo reloading soon. Lee or Hornaday will probably fit my needs, but I'd like to take a look at a Dillon, just for a point of reference.

The problem is finding dealers with the equipment on site.

I've driven two hours to a certain dealer who said over the phone that a certain item was in the store, but he couldn't find it when I got there.

Grrr.

So, I need you S. Ont people to help out.

What GTA retailer has Hornaday in stock and available for inspection?

How about Lee?

And Dillon?

The dealer websites are no help. Phoning will cost $$$.

Thanks in advance.
 
Call Al Simmons guns in Hamilton they carry hornady stuff and often have it in stock

v65magnafan said:
Hi,

Great thread.

I'll be getting into handgun ammo reloading soon. Lee or Hornaday will probably fit my needs, but I'd like to take a look at a Dillon, just for a point of reference.

The problem is finding dealers with the equipment on site.

I've driven two hours to a certain dealer who said over the phone that a certain item was in the store, but he couldn't find it when I got there.

Grrr.

So, I need you S. Ont people to help out.

What GTA retailer has Hornaday in stock and available for inspection?

How about Lee?

And Dillon?

The dealer websites are no help. Phoning will cost $$$.

Thanks in advance.
 
v65magnafan said:
Hi,

Great thread.

I'll be getting into handgun ammo reloading soon. Lee or Hornaday will probably fit my needs, but I'd like to take a look at a Dillon, just for a point of reference.

The problem is finding dealers with the equipment on site.

I've driven two hours to a certain dealer who said over the phone that a certain item was in the store, but he couldn't find it when I got there.

Grrr.

So, I need you S. Ont people to help out.

What GTA retailer has Hornaday in stock and available for inspection?

How about Lee?

And Dillon?

The dealer websites are no help. Phoning will cost $$$.

Thanks in advance.

I have a 650 and 550 both with casefeeders up and running for inspection...
I don't have 650 for sale in stock but I do have a 550 and casefeeder...

As long as you bring your V65... I had a V45 for years...
 
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