Hey folks, I'm keen to get into reloading and would be interested if any of you have some recommendations for books or the best way to start researching some basics to help me on my way. chur chur
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Hey folks, I'm keen to get into reloading and would be interested if any of you have some recommendations for books or the best way to start researching some basics to help me on my way. chur chur
Can't help you with books. But YouTube is also your friend.
https://www.youtube.com/results?sear...nner+reloading
I found https://www.youtube.com/@JohnnysReloadingBench this bloke to be really good when I was starting.
Redding made a really good reference guide for the basic steps to reloading. Has instructions and good photos to help illustrate. here is a link to the guide:
https://www.scribd.com/document/5193...eloading-Guide
good to download and print to have on your bench.
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A good reloading bench for sure. Just built this today using recycled pallets
Attachment 268390
Attachment 268391
Hey man, I asked a similar question and the good folks here sent me two huge PDF books of how to handload. Shall DM you on the best way to get those to ya.
Read them front to back and they're great. Not as good as a mentor to show you hand on, but really detailed stuff.
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Lol.
What equipment do you have?
Greetings @BK10,
Best war to start is with a mentor who will show you how it is done and start you loading your own on their kit. The older manuals had good how to sections. The manufacturers put out some decent vids but they are often trying to sell you things. There is some good stuff on youtube but some absolute shite as well but a mentor will cut through the crap for you.
Regards Grandpamac.
Buy older nosler manual.the first few editions have absolute goldmine in front half of book. It's the how and why. Not the stick this in here n do this....it tells how it works.my brain soaks that up much better. Nick Harvey manual has similar but nosler is just ideal. Plenty of recipe manuals but the Nitty gritty is where the learning gold is at.
@BK10
This might help.
https://ssaa.org.au/stories/reloadin...cartridge.html
Thanks for all your help, that will get me on my way as I'm a bit of a researcher before I do any practical things, Also cant wait to tell my misses that the reloading bench goes in the lounge!!
Nothing wrong with that, especially in the lounge!
Before you do anything else, get a 400 x 300 piece of steel plate and bolt it to the bench, then bolt your press right through the plate and benchtop. This will stiffen everything up and stop your benchtop from flexing.
@BK10
PM sent
First thing to buy is a good Reloading manual, I know books are old school but they can be sitting open while you are working for quick reference.
have a look at what projectiles are easily available to you or that you want to use and buy their latest manual, they all have the steps required to turn out
excellent ammo, I am a Hornady fan and use only their projectiles and my cast ones, their latest manual is very good the loads I have tried are very safe,
also the Lyman 50th Edition is very good and has cast bullet info as a bonus.
What caliber(s) are you wanting to load for ?
www.hodgdonreloading.com Is an excellent resource for all kinds of load data. I use it regularly.
Take your time, pay attention, and try to work with someone who knows what he's doing.
You have a lot of good advice and none of it is wrong.
Before you go and spend a lot of money, I would do the research and gain some basic knowledge, which is what you are trying to do. You are on to a perfect start. So, here is what I suggest - I'll look at your question differently and hope to add some value.
1. - BE SAFE
2. Why do you want to start reloading?
* If it is to save money, that is unlikely. You will end up buying various gear and some will not be used much. You will experiment a lot and waste components sometimes. You will shoot a lot more when reloading.
* If it is to make your own custom made ammo that shoots well in your rifles, then that is a great reason to reload. I really wanted to hunt and kill animals with ammo that I made myself. The step by step journey of developing an accurate load in my rifle that performs well on game is a unique kind of satisfaction.
3. Buy the Lyman manual - latest edition. Read the early chapter (not the load data) 3 times. You need to understand the variables of Case capacity, powder charge, powder burn rate, bullet weight, etc. on velocity and pressure. MOST IMPORTANTLY you need to understand how PRESSURE works. Pressure goes up exponentially. It is not a simple 1:1. You will not understand this in your first 1 year or even 2 years. (I may be wrong and you may already have a career in working with pressure vessels ;) )
*As you start increasing your powder charge, there is a high probability that you could suddenly exceed safe levels and risk a blown primer or worse. The thumb rule I use is that Pressure goes up at two to four times the rate of increase in powder charge & velocity. What I mean is that if you increase powder charge by 1%, velocity might go up by 1% to 2% but pressure will go up by 2% to 4%. Things can change VERY QUICKLY from safe average loads to dangerous unsafe loads.
4. NEVER try to exceed published & tested loads / velocities. You will meet people who claim that they get 100 fps more than the book load and it is because they have a fast barrel and there is some magic technique they use etc. Just walk away and never discuss reloading with that person again.
* The Lyman manual has the BIG advantage of Pressure tested load data that other manuals do not have.
* An extra 200 feet per second is not going to help you kill a deer any better. Reliable safe ammo that is correctly zeroed in your rifle will get you a deer every time as long as you shoot it well and place the bullet in the right place. Some of my hunting loads have taken deer at 300+ meters and they are 150 fps slower than the book load.
* Unsafe ammo can get jammed in your rifle, damage your rifle, hurt you by blowing hot gas in your eyes etc. YouTube has many clips of rifles blowing up.
* I've loaded for at least 14 different rifle cartridges, and I have blown primers on 2 occasions - one was because I had seated the old Barnes X bullet too far out into the lands and that spiked pressure. The other was because I crimped one round and that again spiked pressure. As I said earlier - Pressure is a very complex variable and you need to really understand all the tiny factors that can make it spike into the dangerous territory.
3. I started with the Lee reloading kit. Never regretted it. After 30+ years I still make very accurate & safe ammo.
* I find Lee gear very reliable and of good quality. They are also very affordable when compared to other brands.
* You can always upgrade as you gain more experience and develop your own style, goals etc.
* The internet is full of people who rubbish Lee gear. It is also full of competition shooters who use Lee equipment and win medals.
Like what others have suggested, find a buddy / mentor but make sure he is not a high risk maverick.
Be safe & have fun.
@BK10
Made any progress?
@Oldbloke
Just been reading up and slowly getting my head round it :)
Get yourself an RCBS single stage press and go from there. That thing is like realestate - they arent getting any cheaper
@BK10
You do know that to get started you only need to do the basics, don't you?
https://rcbs.com/how-to-reload/
You will be able improve with experience over time.
If your not careful you will drown in complex information you don't need ATM.
@Oldbloke Sure do mate, its just how my brain learns, I'm old enough to have worked out what works for me :thumbs