I am looking at getting started with reloading. Currently mainly shoot 9mm, 223,308 and 6.5CM. I’ve looked at lee single stage press kits but everything seem sold or over priced compared to each other. Looked at different powders and bullets also but no idea where to start. Only good thing is that I always save my brass don’t know why just always done it.
Any help in the right direction as in is it worth it it reload. Have trouble getting Ammo I like around here in the places I have available. Or is everything going to priced higher because of the virus scare.
Thoughts on any of the above, limited budget also.
Price out your equipment and then look at the volume you shoot and decide if it's worth it to you. If you shoot enough it will pay for itself quickly. To get started with the most basic/starter reloading set up, you will need this:
1. Press (single stage) O frame
2. Scale (beam scale) for weighing powder charges and bullets.
3. Priming tool (some presses come with a priming tool, LEE for example)
4. reloading die set for your chosen cartridge AND shell holder (LEE dies come with shell holder)
5. trimmer (not needed for most handgun cartridges) use the LEE handheld trimmers for about $15
6. powder funnel
7. loading block (easy to make it yourself with a piece of 2x4 and a drill)
8. case preparation tools (inside/outside neck chamfer, large and small primer pocket cleaners)
9. caliper (digital or dial)
10. bullet puller, because you will need one eventually
11. Components: bullets, brass, powder, primers
This is a basic setup that will make good ammunition and it's all many shooters will ever need. Later you may want to add a powder measure and some kind of brass cleaning machine but you don't need it right away.
A basic set of gear will cost at least $400 for tooling plus the cost of components. For instance - If you shoot 200 rounds of factory a year at $30 per box of 20, that's $300 per year, so it would take a couple years to get the payback. If you shoot 400 rounds of factory ammo / year, reloading would pay for itself in the first year and you'd be money ahead after that. So it depends on how much you shoot and the cost of the factory ammo you're using now.
Good books are : ABCs of Reloading, Lyman Reloading Manual
Online resources: search "reloading basics" or "learning to reload". Or check out this search page:
https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=reloading+basics&qpvt=reloading+basics&FORM=VDRE
Gun Digest made some good vids:
Learn The Basics Of Reloading Ammo: GUN DIGEST Videos
CGN member Greenbob maintains a huge online source of free reloading resources, contact him by PM for the link.