Reloading Questions?

Shooterjimi

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I have a 30.06 an I have been having difficulty finding 180gr round. The ones i found were aroun 60-80 per 20. My son took up shooting this year. Is it still cost effective to reload? What do I all need to get started?
 
Do a search on this website - seems like a weekly question - expect to spend from $50 to $5000 in tools (sort of depends how much time you want to spend at it and how fussy you are for results) and then find cases, powder, primers and bullets. Most of us NOT finding Large Rifle Primers to buy, just now, which is the size that most 30-06 brass will need. Typically you will buy powder by the pound - so like 125 x 30-06 rounds worth, depending on recipe that you chose to use; typically you will buy bullets 100 at a time in bags or boxes, typically you will buy new cases in bags of 50 or 100. Primers, if you can find to buy, were usually in trays of 100 - most of us would buy carton (1000 primers) when we could get them. You are going to tie up a LOT of money to load your own - much cheaper (if you bought supplies and tools in the past) and usually more convenient for you, especially if you plan to load 5,000 rounds and are okay with many hundreds dollars in tools and supplies on hand.
 
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CGN has tons of threads and discussion about starting out in reloading, and pros/cons to just buying factory ammo online and in local stores when available. Explore the search tool, and you should have dozens of hours of reading on the subject.

My history: My first centerfire rifle was a 30-06. I bought ammo online and in local gun store. I kept all my brass cases. I wasn't sure if I would shoot enough to justify getting into reloading, but the value of brass cases is now well over a buck a case, approaching 2 bucks. Hold onto it, its valuable and can always be sold.

My original idea was for hunting a rifle. After a while, and alot of saved brass, I determined I was in fact going to shoot enough to warrant reloading - I would use my hunting rifle also for regular target shooting fun.

Since then I haven't looked back - I reload for the 30-06 and several other rifles in different calibers I have bought since. I have not bought factory ammo for many years now. I really enjoy the experimental methods of reloading, and shooting the results. Its a life-long enjoyable hobby and lifestyle.

Since I shoot over a thousand centerfire rounds per year, there is no question for me that reloading is a necessity to "save" money. To buy this amount of factory ammo retail would be impossible for me. But in taking up the shooting sports, one is not "saving" money so to speak. I am spending less money by reloading, but its still more money being spent than before I took up the shooting sports! :)

Recommendation: Buy a reloading manual and read it. This will give you a good idea of the basic gear needed to start out reloading. Its not as daunting as it first appears, because most of the approx. 2 inch thickness of the manual is reloading data per each caliber. The actual how-to text chapters are a small subset of the thickness of the manual.

I read through the Lee and Lyman reloading manuals. I skipped the pistol and revolver loading (since I don't own those firearms), and the lead bullet casting, since I focused on jacketed bullets. That reduced the chapters to a quick and easy read-through, well worth my time.

Once educated by the manuals, then I watched hundreds of YouTube videos on reloading stuff. The education from the manuals helps to filter the better videos from the not so good videos. Also, on YouTube there are alot of elite benchrest or high level competition reloading techniques and systems that are not necessary to get started at a beginner level. Learn the basics, then consider if you need to move to elite reloading methods.

For the 30-06, you can started reloading complete for under $100 with a Lee Loader kit. This will have limitations, but is perfectly fine for hunting and basic fun target shooting.

Later you can window shop online for relative prices, and watch YouTube videos to get a sense of what you might need/want.

For basic systems where accuracy and precision are your interest, then you add more gear like a press, die sets, calipers and other measuring tools, brass trimmers, brass cleaning equipment, etc. The reloading manuals will have all the details.

Find some friends at your local gun range, and they should be happy to help you with your reloading questions. As mentioned in previous post, some reloading components get scarce from time to time (currently large rifle primers are very scarce). But most good guys at the range will sell you some components for cost to help out a beginner get started. The serious shooters are all reloaders, and keep a robust inventory of primers and can likely spare a few hundred to help out a beginner.

Good luck, its a fun journey!
 
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Lee 50th anniversary set plus a set of dies will do it the most economically. It’s a slippery slope from there. I hardly ever recommend reading a manual. I have a couple for reference of powders that aren’t covered by the Hodgdon reloading database, but I’d recommend YouTube to get the fundamentals. There’s way more info than will ever pop up in one thread on gun nutz.
 
Is it still cost effective to reload? What do I all need to get started?

At a minimum, you will need a press, dies and shellholder, powder scale, case trimmer, and a few small accessories like a case block, powder funnel, and loading manual. I just built a shopping list on Budget Shooter Supply and it came to $407 before tax and shipping, though that includes a Lee powder scale, and just about everybody agrees a better scale should be had.

For components, each cartridge is going to cost you about $1.20 with a run-of-the-mill hunting bullet like a Speer Hot-Cor or Hornady Interlock. The big issue is going to be finding primers. The supply chain was stressed in 2020 and has not recovered. They should be 5 cents each, with multiple brands available, but right now you will pay 20-30 cents each, if you can find anything. Hopefully this won't last much longer, a year ago all primers were in short supply, now only the large rifle are still a problem to find (though all are still too much money).


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