Hey shooters... I'm about getting started in realoading (finally)... I'm trying to get some quality stuff and read quite much on the topic, but there's basically one hing left that still bothers me a bit, although it seem to doens't make too much of a difference ( in a certain price kategory): which press to get.
I will realod ammo for a 308 "practical" rifle, and a .284win custom long range rifle. I'm more concerned about quality, I won't load huge volumes of ammo.
There seem to be basically 3 choices left for me:
1) Rock Chucker supreme / redding big boss / lee classi cast
2) forster coax
3) RCBS summit
1) seem to be the "proven classic" ones. I would also consider buying a forster coax, but this press wouldn't allow me to use the staggered redding competition shellholder set for easy tuning. At the other hand it would allow fast and accurate die change. The forster seems to have a floating die feature by design, but shellholders do float too on convetionaly presses, don't they? So alignment tolerances should be tricked either way? Not sure which one would be the bigger advantage in practice?
And there's the summit... I'm not entirely sure what to think about that one, but if fit and finish is good it might be an interesting alternative to category 1) ?
I know that everyone has some kind of opinion on this, I don't necessaryly want to know which ist "the best" press out there, but rather which kind of features actually DO make a difference in practice (loading low volume, high precision ammo for 2 different rifles), and which kind of features look nice on paper, but ain't much of a help in real life...
thanks in advance...
I will realod ammo for a 308 "practical" rifle, and a .284win custom long range rifle. I'm more concerned about quality, I won't load huge volumes of ammo.
There seem to be basically 3 choices left for me:
1) Rock Chucker supreme / redding big boss / lee classi cast
2) forster coax
3) RCBS summit
1) seem to be the "proven classic" ones. I would also consider buying a forster coax, but this press wouldn't allow me to use the staggered redding competition shellholder set for easy tuning. At the other hand it would allow fast and accurate die change. The forster seems to have a floating die feature by design, but shellholders do float too on convetionaly presses, don't they? So alignment tolerances should be tricked either way? Not sure which one would be the bigger advantage in practice?
And there's the summit... I'm not entirely sure what to think about that one, but if fit and finish is good it might be an interesting alternative to category 1) ?
I know that everyone has some kind of opinion on this, I don't necessaryly want to know which ist "the best" press out there, but rather which kind of features actually DO make a difference in practice (loading low volume, high precision ammo for 2 different rifles), and which kind of features look nice on paper, but ain't much of a help in real life...
thanks in advance...