That's a great way to start out. Make sure you learn lots, and don't believe everything you read on the internet.
Thanks for the advice! I work with 2 guys who have each, over 30 years of experience in the field... so I am pretty confident they will assist me if I have questions.
OP, that set will produce a lot of very good ammo for you. Do yourself a big favor though and check a few rounds from each of the die sets you use in this system. It should be very good and produce straight cartridges if you do your part. If you plan on doing a lot of reloading, say anywhere from 500 plus rounds per year you may want to look at a cast steel framed press. Keep the mandrel lubed lightly with graphkote and it will last a long time. Once you start reloading your own, commercial loads just won't cut it.
Congrats and welcome to reloading! People knock 'em 'cause they're cheap but that same got me started and I still have the press and use it regularly esp for my rifle ammo. I also use it for decapping spent shells or pulling pills from reloads.
PS: You will NEVER look at spent cases lying around on the range floor the same ever again...![]()
OP, that set will produce a lot of very good ammo for you. Do yourself a big favor though and check a few rounds from each of the die sets you use in this system. It should be very good and produce straight cartridges if you do your part. If you plan on doing a lot of reloading, say anywhere from 500 plus rounds per year you may want to look at a cast steel framed press. Keep the mandrel lubed lightly with graphkote and it will last a long time. Once you start reloading your own, commercial loads just won't cut it.
Also gonna splurge and buy a digital metering scale eventually...
The one component of the LEE kits that frustrates people the most is the LEE scale. Yes they do function, but they are extremely finicky, and many people replace them after a very short time.
One of the first things I certainly did. Just don't chintz out and buy some cheap pocket digital scale... pay the money and get quality.
+1 it's what I did, after weighing 1500 rounds manually I love the chargemaster. Won't go back.+1 I would jump streight to a RCBS Chargemaster, I hardly use my other digital scales.