acrashb said:
One can compare anything to anything. Again, if I have made any specific factual errors please point them out.
I don't understand how in one paragraph 'primer feel' you can say with the dillon, you have a better feel for primer seating, yet you state in another paragraph 'missed primers' you give the win to the Lee for ease of fixing this rare glitch
These two statements contradict each other. You can actually feel the primer not seating if it isn't there with the dillon, and that is the point.
You complain about the adjustments on the Dillon charge bar not being easy to set. If you are buying a progressive, automated press, what are the chances you want to crank out thousands of rounds without having to fiddle with it? I'm guessing most would agree, this feature is high on the list.
In my limited experience with the dillon I've had to set it once for my .40S&W load. In thousands of rounds it started at 3.7 grains and is still at 3.7 grains.
I find the following arguements / comparisons as complete non-starters:
- 10 minutes to change calibers?? Come on. Tools? big deal.
- Space as an arguement on which press is better?
The one at the end has me puzzled as well, 'longevity and service'
'Dillon has a no-questions asked service policy – you need parts, you call and get them. Lee has a two-year warranty.'
'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). We’ve all heard similar stories about Dillon machinery.'
How can you say Dillon is 3 times more expensive when you have't factored in all of the additional costs for parts for the Lee, over the course of its' usable life? How about the extra costs to the Dillon owners that have parts fail? Oh that's right, we've all heard similar stories, except Dillon sends it free of charge, as part of the
lifetime warranty.
You claim this was an un-biased comparison, but quite frankly, I think you have a warm spot for your Lee press. In no way did you see benefit to what Dillon offers. Not that there's anything wrong with that, to each his own.
Incidently, what came of the Dillon 650 you had? Did you sell it? How long did you load with it if it wasn't just for the summer?