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HEY! You just git in line behind the rest of us! No jumping!![]()
My suggestion to buy the single stage wasn't to do it first. It was to do it later on as a second press. Once you're into it you won't realize how handy it is to have a single for some side job that needs doing. Especially once you're reloading a few different calibers. For the amount you'll be reloading the progressive makes far more sense. You're on the right track there. Especailly since you're not reloading any rifle calibers yet. When you do unless it's something like 5.56 which you shoot from a black rifle in mass numbers consider buying the single stage THEN. Accurate rifle ammo loading is a whole other plate of pasta and most of us find it's easier and more clear to run off small batches of 50 at a time using a single stage and separating the operations. The big reason being that for this sort of loading EVERY charge is weighed for accuracy. The loads being dropped light from a powder dispenser and then the tray of powder is set on a scale and a powder trickler used to drop in a couple of flakes at a time until you are dead on the desired weight. Only then is the little dish dumped via funnel into the casing.
I know, I know. Too much too soon againBut it'll make sense soon enough.

OK, you THINK you'll weigh the loaded ammo to see if it's right or not. But you'll end up missing some and opening others which are fine. When you're using a whopping great 3 to 5 gns of powder the variations in case and bullet weights add up or subtract more than the amount of powder. When your known GOOD loads vary by more than the powder weight how are you going to know if one round is a squib and another is a double? You won't, simple as that. There's just way too much variation in the weight of the brass cases and bullets. Even good handgun bullets vary in weight by a couple or three grains either side of the listed weight. And if you run mixed brand brass for your 9mm like so many of us do there's more variation than this between brands. So measuring for the weight of the powder in the loaded ammo is simply not going to work at all.
The thing is that you WILL run into glitches. And one wrinkle with the Hornady being an auto indexing press is that it pulls the problem round away from the station you need to address. So you really gotta watch. And since it moves all the rest as well you need to keep track of those too. You can't easily back up the bus or index around a second time.
In a way there's much to be said for removing the auto index parts when you start out and index the shell plate manually. Then later when you have things nailed down and it's all running smoothly put the auto index parts back in. In the meantime running in full progressive with manual indexing is only slightly slower than the machine auto indexing for you. But it might be good for you while learning.
In particular always run a few solo cases around the machine to double check that things are running correctly at the beginning of a session before you start loading up in a full on progressive mode.
I've been meaning to install a small mirror and LED light to let me see down into the cases after the powder station. Haven't done it yet but it's still a good idea. Or in your case if you buy the AP you've got 5 die positions. And for handgun ammo you really only need 4 even with the bullet seating and factory taper crimp dies. So you have the option of using a powder checking die just after the powder drop die. It may be worth considering. You Tube "powder check die" to see what they are.

I'm also just starting to reload and I got the LnL press and will say if I was doing it again I would start with a single stage until you get going on large volumes if your doing pistol or something like AR stuff. If it's just for hunting rounds or precision long range shooting the single stage will your best bet.
Wise move you can do a lot with a good quality single
Grawfr said:.....I see what you mean, I think. I wasn't thinking so much as making sure I had 5.5gr vs 5.4gr or 5.6gr load accuracy... it was mostly to make sure I didn't have an accidental 0.2gr squib or a 7.6gr hot load. And you're right: with that much variation in case and bullet weights there's no point in measuring the entire cartridge for powder weight (unless I measure them before the load also), the powder must be weighted separately. Using the extra station to check the powder actually dispensed by the press makes sense.
Although, thinking of it.. that's a non sequitur, but how much is a bullet accuracy affected by a 3gr variation in weight? Because I'm thinking that if this factor is significant, maybe I should weight each bullet and sort them by identical weights in any case before reloading them, to ensure a batch isn't just of a given powder load, but also of a known range of bullet weight.
I need to learn more: It might make perfect sense to control those variables for a professional sniper or for an Olympic athlete, and be completely superfluous and over-the-top measures for your average joe shooter like me. Caffeine hands...































