madang55 wrote:A. clean
B. anneal
C. size
D. Trim
E. chamfer
F. prime
G. powder and seat.
Yes? No?
Clean, size, anneal, trim
I don't anneal or clean, and most things I trim very rarely.
If you are speaking about doing this process with each individual round then I avoid doing that to prevent mistakes.
I compartmentalise the process, so if I get interrupted at any point there's no danger of making mistakes.
When I get home from shooting I spend a few minutes depriming and sizing my brass, and inspecting it for splits (if I'm doing .303 brass I run it all through the Quick Trim Die after I've sized it all, and chamfer and deburr it). Then I toss it into the tub of "deprimed and sized brass" for that chambering (or for the specific firearm if I'm keeping brass separated for them). This year I've started cleaning my blackpowder brass in the ultrasonic bath, so those I toss into the bath when I get home and let them cook for an hour with 75-degree citric acid, then I rinse in the sink and let them dry for a few days before I run them through the deprime/re-size die.
When I have a spare fifteen minutes or so I'll grab brass from that tub and prime it, and flare it for cast bullets if required. Then it goes into the tub of "primed and flared" brass.
At any point during these processes, if something comes up I can toss whatever brass is in my hand back into the tub I pulled it from, no issue.
When I have a spare 30 minutes or so I stop by the press, grab some primed brass from the tub and charge it with powder. Some (9mm and .38 Special) I do by filling a loading block and running it under the powder thrower, very quick. Some (most rifle rounds and larger pistol rounds) I charge each case from the powder thrower as I pull it from the tub and then put it into the loading block. And others (precision rifle rounds, test loads and blackpowder) I charge manually from the scale, very slow.
Once the loading block is full, then I look across the top of them all with a light to confirm all have similar powder levels. If I get distracted during the charging I lay a sheet of paper over the charged brass to prevent debris getting in there, go and sort the chores, and come back to it.
Once I've confirmed the cases are correctly charged I seat the bullets, and crimp them if I'm using the seating die to crimp. From here they go into the tub of loaded ammo, or "loaded but not crimped" if I'm crimping separately. Usually I will swap the die and crimp this ammo as soon as I finish loading the batch, just to prevent my inadvertantly grabbing a handful of uncrimped ammo for shooting - that can ruin your day.
When I empty the ammo boxes I'm using I refill them from the tubs of loaded ammo, usually after I've sized and deprimed the day's brass, but sometimes I leave it until I'm getting my ammo ready for a shoot.
Shotshells I do a little differently. When I bring them home I toss them into a big box under my loading bench (they take up too much room to go in a cupboard). One day when I think of it I'll deprime/size/prime a hundred or more (on the Lee Load-All II) and toss them into the tub of "sized and primed" hulls. Again, when I'm ready to load some shells I'll charge a batch of primed hulls with a dipper (I don't use a loading block for these as they're fairly stable just stood on the bench). I don't look over these with a light as the old petals are usually in the way. Then I use the Load-All to open up the crimp and feed a wad or shotcup into the hull. Now I can look over them with a light to see that all the wads look to be at similar levels. Then I drop a dipper of shot into a shell, put in an over-shot disc or card, and crimp it. I don't like to leave these on the bench uncrimped as the shot makes them top-heavy and knocking them over makes a mess. I've got to do a few hundred shotshells this week but I want to try doing away with the crimp as it's unreliable, especially as the hulls get old. I was given a tip of hitting the centre of the crimp with a soldering iron to hold it in place, but I doubt I can do that very often. I don't shoot a lot of 12ga. so I'm only loading these a couple times a year, and only with blackpowder. And I don't need to make them last as I can bring home several hundred after every shoot if I want them.
Now, the downside to this is that it means I'm doing some part of the process almost every day. But for me, that works a whole lot better than trying to set aside a whole day, weekend, or week just to load a huge batch of different ammo every few months. Last year I loaded 9400rds.