There are 2 or 3 places that sell Dillon from stock near me. One of them only stocks pistol calibres, but he added a 1050 in .308 to his Dillon order for me and that's how I obtained my press a year or so ago. One of the others might have .223 in stock.ovenpaa wrote:I am thinking of buying a multi stage press for .223 ammunition, I know that Dillon do such things however they are scarcer than scarce things over here, are there any alternatives? Ideally if I could build 500/750 rounds in a day I would be quite happy. This is purely to feed a new habit for shooting at 200/400 yards and only for ammunition for my own use.
Although I can buy a cheap .223 by the bucket load it is not really suited to my needs. Doe anyone have any suggestion for a suitable machine, I prefer it to be European sourced.
You often hear that progressives don't make ammo as good as single stage presses, but I'm yet to find a parameter by which ammo made on my 1050 is 'worse'. Of course, I don't throw powder on it, but by using Quality dies (Redding, Forster etc) I get consistency in seating depth, bullet runout, shoulder position that is not measurably worse than they were on a single stage press. The first ammo I made on it gave me a PB at 300m that was one point short of the Commonwealth record (60 shots at a [Edit] 1.2 minute bull, which is practically an F Class target shot with no optics or rest). My production rate is limited to about 200 to 250 an hour with a charge variance of about +/- 0.02 gr, but it is practically worth having the press just to be able to full-length size and trim 750 cases per hour.
I've had a couple of brief dealings with Dillon themselves and both have been just 'ok'. On the other hand I've dealt with two reloading companies whose customer service people often rave about and have had absolutely appalling experiences. I think there's an element of chance involved, but you only really find out if a supplier is any good when something goes wrong, and that hasn't happened to me with Dillon.
People seen to get more emotional and fanatical about which brand of progressive than about any other piece of reloading gear (well, perhaps apart from the infinite "Lee is great"/"Lee is sh*t" debate). I agonise over the simplest purchasing decision, and so the Dillon decision was not easy, but I have never regretted it. I wish I was able to use it more often, and better able to consume what it produces. I have a hazy vision of an HK MR308 in my future.
Note that all of this applies to the 1050 only. Among many months of research (actually, I think it spanned years) I took advice from someone who has made many millions of rounds on progressives, and has a 550, 650 and several 1050s and uses the 550 to make F Class ammo. Lots of people follow the marketing mantra that choosing between the Dillon models is simply down to the volume you need to produce. There is much more to it than that.
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