Bushie wrote:Where do you guys think Is a good place to start and what rounds are the best cost wise?
bladeracer wrote:Bushie wrote:Where do you guys think Is a good place to start and what rounds are the best cost wise?
Wow - talk about a wide open question
I'm going to say .223 Remington.
Huge variety of bullets.
Cheap bulk brass and bullets available at times.
Actually, I recon a musket. Just pop the powder in, whack the ball in there and off you go. I mean, as far as the process goes, that would be the easiest
bladeracer wrote:Bushie wrote:Where do you guys think Is a good place to start and what rounds are the best cost wise?
Wow - talk about a wide open question
I'm going to say .223 Remington.
Huge variety of bullets.
Cheap bulk brass and bullets available at times.
bladeracer wrote:Bushie wrote:Where do you guys think Is a good place to start and what rounds are the best cost wise?
Wow - talk about a wide open question
I'm going to say .223 Remington.
Huge variety of bullets.
bentaz wrote:
What guns do you have?
Wylie27 wrote:Ohh no stop the process now or you will be forever broke. No girlfriends, ****** car, no friends... no really .22 is a gateway drug..
Reloading doesn't make it cheaper, it allows you to shoot more for the same price..
Lokvo wrote:I'd like to reload but just don't have the space for it or work bench how feasible is reloading via something like a lee hand press? or is that just really a pain?
Lokvo wrote:Even for small number of reloads like around 20 - 40 rounds once a week? for 223.
Lokvo wrote:I'd like to reload but just don't have the space for it or work bench how feasible is reloading via something like a lee hand press? or is that just really a pain?
Bushie wrote:If I picked up a hand loaded, theoretically, could I do everything I need to do to reload on that, plus a primer feeder?