Turret Press questions

hydro556

Gunny Sergeant
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Minuteman
Dec 1, 2007
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STL, home of the Cardinals.
I have a couple of RCBS Rockchucker Supremes and enjoy loading with them. At one time I had a Dillon RL550 and never even unpacked it. Ended up trading it off.

I like loading on my single stages but have recently started loading 338LM in addition to 308. This has resulted in my having to do more die swapping than I want. I have never used, or even seen, a turret press.

I want to make sure I am understanding it correctly. It is basically a single stage press with a rotating turret on top in which you can place different dies. I am simply wanting to avoid having to change dies. I could just set my dies and lock them in, then rotate the turret to go from sizing to seating and from 308 to 338LM, right?

I like Redding and have been checking out their T7 Turret. Is this press up to the quality of pretty much everything else Redding? Are there better turret presses available?
 
Re: Turret Press questions

Your understanding is correct, and the folks that have the T7s speak highly of them.

I have a couple of Harrells turret presses, and they are nice. I reload at the range some, and the Harrells are portable, and that is the main reason I bought them instead of the Redding.

http://harrellsprec.com/index.php?crn=205&rn=381&action=show_detail

Hope that helps.
 
Re: Turret Press questions

The T-7 is up to most anything and I don't know of another turret that will be stronger.

You may want to check and see if it has enough room for 338LM, I wouldn't know. Check with Redding to be sure.

Another choice is the Hornady Lock-n-load bushings in a standard press....makes for easy die swaps and each will retain it's individual setup. Another popular choice is the Forster Co-Ax press but that one may or may not have die-height issues.
 
Re: Turret Press questions

Thanks guys. I will check the LNL adapters. After buying a set of Redding Comp dies, I am impressed with Redding in general and kind of want to "upgrade" presses, not that I have found a single issue with the RockChuckers.

Is there a certain place to buy Redding presses that is better than others?
 
Re: Turret Press questions

I don't know who is cheapest.

These things have really gone up in price. I think I paid about $170.00 when they first came out.
So long as it will work with the 338LM dies, you won't regret it. Nice F'n press.
 
Re: Turret Press questions

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Fuzzball</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Your view of turret presses is correct. And the T-7 is the best of its type. </div></div>

+1... I agree.
 
Re: Turret Press questions

I have a T7 and love it! it was my first press and Im glad I spent the extra money on it when I did!

That being said, the only press that I would say is better is a Hollywood turret press, but then again it costs wayyy more.
 
Re: Turret Press questions

i have reloaded cartridges with longer AOL than the press stroke before. you have to slide the cartridge rim out of the shell holder with the bullet tip still kind of in the seating die. this with my older Rockchucker. maybe i diddn't explain it well, but it's doable...
 
Re: Turret Press questions

Advertised ram stroke for the T-7 is 3 13/16". Same as for the Big Boss. The shell holder will decrease it slightly.

You can use the LnL bushing with the UltraMag. <span style="font-style: italic">BigSoundRacing</span> used this setup. He had posted pictures in the past, but it looks like his stuff is no longer available.

If you could find an alternative way to seat bullets for the 338LM, the turret press would be fine. Does anyone have hand dies for the cartridge? Seat with a wooden mallet? Or a valve spring compressor?