OK, time to look at your basic assumptions.
If you are already shooting a lot, you probably have a bunch of brass, right? (Tell me you didn't toss it...) The most expensive bit is the brass, so if you already have it, your brass cost is effectively zip-diddly.
Next-most expensive is the bullet. If you insist on FMJ for your 9mm, well, you're going to pay a lot more than if you're willing to settle for plain lead bullets. Bullet Barn sells 9mm lead for $47 per 500 - less than 10¢ each (plus shipping and tax, of course). If you cast your own, it's dramatically less.
Primers will set you back maybe 5¢ each.
Propellant goes a long way - I use 3.4 gr of Red Dot for my 9mm, rather over 2,000 loads per pound. If Red Dot sells for $35 a pound, that's less than 2¢ a round.
So, using your own brass, you can be shooting perfectly good ammo for 17¢ a round as opposed to the 27¢ you quote for factory in bulk. So your potential savings are 10¢ a round - $1 every time you empty a magazine.
That's for 9mm Parabellum. Sorry, I don't reload .223, but you can do the research. If you want FMJ ammo, you probably won't be saving all that much for some calibres. (Now ask about .30-06, .303, .38-55 , the WSMs or any of the no-longer-current-military calibres. Your savings are much greater.)
Against that you have to factor in the cost of the gear. If you go top-end like the Dillon you mention, it's a lot of bullets down-range. If you're willing to pay less money but invest more time, using a single-stage press, you can be in business for as low as $300.
It's all a question of how much you shoot, how particular you are, how much time you are willing to spend reloading and how much money you have to spend. After that, it's all basic arithmetic.
If you are already shooting a lot, you probably have a bunch of brass, right? (Tell me you didn't toss it...) The most expensive bit is the brass, so if you already have it, your brass cost is effectively zip-diddly.
Next-most expensive is the bullet. If you insist on FMJ for your 9mm, well, you're going to pay a lot more than if you're willing to settle for plain lead bullets. Bullet Barn sells 9mm lead for $47 per 500 - less than 10¢ each (plus shipping and tax, of course). If you cast your own, it's dramatically less.
Primers will set you back maybe 5¢ each.
Propellant goes a long way - I use 3.4 gr of Red Dot for my 9mm, rather over 2,000 loads per pound. If Red Dot sells for $35 a pound, that's less than 2¢ a round.
So, using your own brass, you can be shooting perfectly good ammo for 17¢ a round as opposed to the 27¢ you quote for factory in bulk. So your potential savings are 10¢ a round - $1 every time you empty a magazine.
That's for 9mm Parabellum. Sorry, I don't reload .223, but you can do the research. If you want FMJ ammo, you probably won't be saving all that much for some calibres. (Now ask about .30-06, .303, .38-55 , the WSMs or any of the no-longer-current-military calibres. Your savings are much greater.)
Against that you have to factor in the cost of the gear. If you go top-end like the Dillon you mention, it's a lot of bullets down-range. If you're willing to pay less money but invest more time, using a single-stage press, you can be in business for as low as $300.
It's all a question of how much you shoot, how particular you are, how much time you are willing to spend reloading and how much money you have to spend. After that, it's all basic arithmetic.