Who's got the best price on Hornady LNL AP?

Trinimon

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So, I've been reloading 9mm for two buddies and I'm thinking of picking up a progressive press. Doing all that work on a single stage is starting to get tough on my aging back (I stand when reloading). Who's got the best price on the Hornady LNL AP? Am I better off picking up a unit over in the US?

Is everyone happy with the units?
 
Yup, I've done business with Henry in the past but was curious if anyone had a good price on these esp in the GTA. Shipping that box is gonna be pricey. My other option is to order it from Brownells (on sale for $409!) and have it shipped to Buffalo and pick it up and just pay the taxes for it at the border. Sure beats $550. plus taxes and shipping.
 
Love my LnL AP, and if they still have the Get Loaded promotion for free bullets it's even better.

I once broke a case retainer spring and recently lost a small washer; 1 email and 24 hrs later the part was shipped tp me at no charge in both occasions. That's customer service!

I always try to support the Canadian dealers when possible, but that Brownells special is pretty good...
 
try a sail store close to you i got mine at sail in ottawa for 575.00 no tax but they had a deal on only for that weekend other than that the regular price is 649.00 plus tax thats the best price ive seen around here. try bass pro ,or elwood epps , higgison powder in hawksbury , hound13
 
Yup, I've done business with Henry in the past but was curious if anyone had a good price on these esp in the GTA. Shipping that box is gonna be pricey. My other option is to order it from Brownells (on sale for $409!) and have it shipped to Buffalo and pick it up and just pay the taxes for it at the border. Sure beats $550. plus taxes and shipping.

Wow. $409 is pretty tempting... Even with exchange and taxes, if I got that when I go to my sister's in Ohio for a week, it'd be duty free too.
 
Wow. $409 is pretty tempting... Even with exchange and taxes, if I got that when I go to my sister's in Ohio for a week, it'd be duty free too.

LOL, see what I'm getting at. Seems like a good time to pick one up if you live near the border. Shipping that to Canada would tack on an easy $40US shipping and you're sure to get dinged with duty and taxes.
 
Ok, managed to work out a deal with a fellow CGNer on a unit. :)

Can someone measure the linkage length on their LNL AP for me? I'm looking at picking up a set of Inline Fabrication Quick Change bases/legs for my bench since I'm limited for space. I'm thinking the 9 5/8" might be on the high side but not sure if the 6" is enough for the linkage to clear my benchtop.

Thanks!
 
Trinimon,
i picked mine up in Buffalo, i claimed it at the border and only paid 64 bucks for duty, with the lower cost from Brownellls, and the shipping with the duty, its still cheaper than any price here in Canada, with the cost of the US dollar going up and fuel surcharges etc. etc etc, the importers have no choice here in Canada but to raise the prices, when i was shopping for one a couple months ago (April) the prices here in the Niagara , Hamilton, Simcoe area where anywhere from 650 to a high of 850 for the same unit, after all said and done i had mine home after exchange, duty shipping and the cost of the unit for around 550 , but that was paying about 449 for the press, so with your 40 saving you should be about 500 all in , which is alot cheaper than what you will get here in the Great white North. and with the savings it will leave you more to spend on all that powder that is available now LOL, and the press has worked very well for myself so far (about 2500 rounds so far)
Cheers
rebore41
 
What is "linkage length"?
Ok, managed to work out a deal with a fellow CGNer on a unit. :)

Can someone measure the linkage length on their LNL AP for me? I'm looking at picking up a set of Inline Fabrication Quick Change bases/legs for my bench since I'm limited for space. I'm thinking the 9 5/8" might be on the high side but not sure if the 6" is enough for the linkage to clear my benchtop.

Thanks!
 
Thanks Redbore. I got a deal from a CGNer on a supposedly relatively new unit all setup already for 9mm. It worked out to a decent price with components included else I'd have done the Buffalo pickup myself. Even if the Brownells deal ends, I found out that Amazon.com has it for $414 regular price and free shipping. Guess it pays to live somewhat close to the border. :)
 
If you're only looking at loading one cartridge, especially a pistol cartridge, I've gotta cast my vote for the Square Deal B.

I also use a Hornady LnL AP, do almost all my reloading on it - my Square Deal is set-up for .38 Spl - and I have to admit, the LnL is a whole lot more versatile; I load .38, .357, 9mm, .45 ACP and .455; the LnL can do all these and my rifle calibres when I get back into rifle shooting. But it's a pain in so many niggly little ways, and throws me so many curve-balls that I've never encountered on the Square Deal, that I honestly can't recommend it:

1) the primer feed has caused nothing but headaches and frustration. It handles small primers flawlessly - I mean flawlessly - never had a problem. :) Large primers, oy. :( I had to assemble the feed tube with a fiber washer because it pinched the slider, and then I had to give the slider a lot of TLC with a fine file so it didn't snag on everything in its way and some stuff it made-up, and every fifth-or-so stroke, it pops out of the track at its farthest point of extension and hangs-up. So I reach back and slip it sideways back into the track, and let it come slowly forward - you don't dare just let it go and the spring does the rest, it'll whang forward and the primer in it is going flying - somewhere (still haven't found the last primer it threw across my shop) - and it catches on the rim of the cartridge in that station so tilt the cartridge up and raise the ram a little so the slider doesn't catch on the primer ram...

2) speaking of the primer slide spring, I've come within an ace of losing it so often; I tried crunching its eye closed when it's in its hole so it can't fall off, but it's almost impossible to get-at for a clumsy left-hander. The primer ram has made a mess of the press where it hits, they should've put a steel button there - and at first, even pushing the platform all the way down, the ram would not seat the primer deep enough and the press would hang-up. When I called Hornady the first time they sent me two new rams, just based-on the ser# of my press; they sent me a bunch of other parts I hadn't asked-for too, clearly they've been getting complaints.

3) I dare not get comfortably into reloading on the LnL, bullet here cartridge there haul away, I must always be on my guard and stop at the first sign of trouble - because otherwise there'll be yet another CRUNCH and I'll break yet another black plastic arm from the top of the press when the primer slider decides to jam in-place instead of nicely sliding up that s-shaped stainless steel rod. I've gone through at least four of those black plastic arms - I admit the first one was broken during my own maladroit set-up of the press, but the rest died in the line of duty; have Hornady send you several spares, and spares for both the primer slider spring and the powder measure spring. Oh and, pay attention to the wheels that the sliders ride-on when they go up that s-shaped stainless steel rod, because the pins that hold them onto the sliders come out; I haven't lost a wheel or pin yet, but if I do I'll never find it.

4) I bought the LnL instead of a Dillon 650 because I LOVED the thought of those round springs that hold the cartridges in the shellplates; I've always found the pins the Square Deal uses to hold its cartridges in, a pain. But I advise you in passing, that those round springs WILL find their way under the lip of a cartridge, and they WILL get crunched; and then they don't look nice, and no matter how often you re-set them so the crunch is hidden under the body of a shellplate, it will straightaway find itself out into one of the openings in the plate, there to look like he11 and tilt the cartridge in funny ways.

5) I looked like a total buffoon (I usually do anyways :redface: ) when I took a couple handguns to a local smith; I brought along some handloads so we could test for accuracy with the ammo we actually use, and one of them was a primer-only load that lodged a round in the barrel. I bought and use a progressive press specifically so squib loads, double-charges &c should not happen to me - and it took awhile to figger-out how this squib load came-about. You see, the LnL likes to fall-apart in use; I was used to the bolt on the shell-plate backing-off (I can't tighten it more than finger-tight on my LnL or it binds the whole press solid), but it had pulled a new one this particular day - the powder measure had turned around in its bayonet-lock, and then instead of dropping a charge of powder, the whole powder measure rose-up out of the press with the cartridge underneath it, pushing it up. I caught it the second time it did it - I missed it the first time. Now I tighten the shellplate bolt and turn the powder measure full-clockwise every ten rounds or so; no biggie, but considering how much I paid for the LnL I really feel like I shouldn't have to in the first place. :mad: P.S. I love the bayonets.

6) some final advice for reloading 9mm on a progressive - 9mm is a very fiddly round, and press set-up must be done with care. My 9mm has a .357 bore, and I was trying to use .358 bullets in it - but .358" plus the thickness of the cartridge walls meant that the rounds were too fat to chamber. I eventually solved it, by going with another bullet - one that comes out of the mould at .3575" :rolleyes: - but if you don't have this problem, use Winchester brass; it's the thickest of the lot. I also heartily recommend a case gauge; I have a 7-cavity one, and every round goes in it before it goes in the ammo box. Reloading .45 ACP is a picnic compared to 9mm.

Cheers, and best of luck!
 
Thanks for the heads up Gwesson. I'm going to be primarily reloading 9mm on the LNL. I've got a RCBS Powder Check on order as a precaution but I'll definitely keep an eye out for the other hiccups. If it ends up in the EE after a few months... you'll know why. ha!
 
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My case feeder has never run smoothly, I've had to change shell plates 3 times to get one that didn't flip cases consistently, so form a progressive standpoint, there was less progressiveness than I would have liked.
I was only getting 3-400 rounds loaded an hour.

Bought a Dillon and have never looked back.
Hopefully yours works for you.
 
Mandatory LNL viewing. Start here and go through all his movies, it really helped me out. The Hornady LNL is just a as good as a Dillon.

http://youtu.be/-qC1O5FzSCA
 
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