I will be reloading once I get my AR...should be here in a week or so....first one. I plan to buy 500 or 1000 rounds of factory ammo first just to get a brass supply started. Could someone tell me which bulk factory 223 ammo has decent brass? I'm looking at buying that bulk American Eagle 55gr stuff unless someone tells me the AE brass sucks...
I shoot American eagle brass, and Lake city both with crimped primers.
Haven't got a swager yet so I just take as much of the crimp out as I can with a small Lee chamfer tool.
Works good, but it's kind of tiring on the hands.
Asking out of curiosity...
I'm finding I am shooting the AR a lot more and debating whether reloading (specifically the 223 Rem cartridge) is a viable option.
From my worksheet, it seems I can reload 223 for around $0.30/rd using my own brass (reloading equipment not counted).
99% of the time I shoot my AR at the action range of my shooting range, 15 to 25 yards.
What's your recipe?
I was afraid I might get a response like this! The reason is that figuring my attraction to building things from the ground up, I think I may very well like reloading as wellI like reloading. To me it's part of the experience.
Damn it, that's a good point!I can make a huge amount rounds over time in the winter, spreading out the work and cost. Buying factory in bulk means a big hit on your credit card.
^ Another tool that works well is a princess auto "cone shaped" carbide die grinder bit. Makes quick work of the pocket. Loads perfectly into a drill (an actual die grinder spins too fast for this operation). I may buy a dillon super swager soon though...mainly just cuz I want one.
Also a 223 reloader. Reloading is almost as fun as shooting. Something about a hand full of cartridges that you made yourself instills a "cave man create fire" type experience.



























