Press Question: Reloading Rifle Cartridges

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WrongHanded

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I'm not planning on getting into reloading rifle cartridges yet. However, I currently only have a LCT press. It's wobbly and not terribly precise. Certainly good enough for handgun cartridges (at least based on my results), but perhaps not quite as precise as I'd want for rifle cartridge reloading?

I'm not interested in a progressive press for various reasons. But would a single stage press be a good option for rifles, or possibly a less wobbly turret design of some kind?

I'm intending on loading primarily .375 Ruger because it's the most expensive cartridge I shoot. But will likely follow it up with .30-06 and .308 eventually.
 
But would a single stage press be a good option for rifles, or possibly a less wobbly turret design of some kind?

For accurate rifle ammo, a single stage is hard to beat. I'm especially taken with the Co-Ax, the Mec Marksman and the RCBS Summit (in descending order)

If you'd like a turret, the Redding T-7 is in the same tier as most single stage presses...without going all the way to the top of the class with the Area 419 Zero
 
I have a Redding single stage press. Works great.

The Redding Big Boss, RCBS Rockchucker, Lyman, or Hornady will serve you well. There is another single stage press, the Co-Ax, that has a big following. It uses a different die mounting system than a conventional o-frame press.

I know lots of folks like turrets but I do not see any advantage to them over a single single stage press. I’d rather take the money saved buying a single stage press and buy more reloading gear.

Just something to consider.
 
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I would bet you could tune your current press to make accurate ammo….
Otherwise, you can make precision ammo with an economically priced machine…
Single stage would fit that bill…
Personslly, I don’t think you need to spend a fortune on a press to do what you are asking…
As always, just my humble opinion..
 
Thanks for the feedback everyone!

I've honestly been pretty pleased with my LCT, but I can see that it and the Lee dies I have for various cartridges aren't designed for high precision loading. They work well enough for what I've been doing so far, but I'd like to do a little better when I start producing rifle ammo.

I'll ask about dies when I'm closer to being ready, but a solid single stage press is in the cards. Maybe next year, I'll get that ball rolling.
 
I just picked up a RC IV for 75.00 local pickup. Like new. Beefier and bigger than my RC II. Deals are out there if you religiously look.

As said, all the cast iron single stage presses will probably outlast all of us if taken care of. I have dies and accessories by RCBS, Lyman, Hornady and Lee and it's all good stuff IMO.
 
Do checkout the new RCBS Rebel.....bigger, beefier than even the venerable Rock Chucker, and finally has the spent primers taken care of....no more primers going places you don't want them to go. There is no on-press priming, but I prefer a dedicated bench primer anyway....better feel. There is only one single station press heavier than the Rebel, and that's Hornady's latest Iron Press. I haven't heard that much about that huge red one.....It's been out a while, so that surprises me.... Anyone with Iron Press experience?
 
Do checkout the new RCBS Rebel.....bigger, beefier than even the venerable Rock Chucker, and finally has the spent primers taken care of....no more primers going places you don't want them to go. There is no on-press priming, but I prefer a dedicated bench primer anyway....better feel.

I did look at the Rebel. Currently I'm priming on-press, but I suppose I could move the shell holder (assuming they're compatible) over to my LCT and prime on that until I find/buy another solution. Right?
 
I've used a Pacific "C" press for 38 yrs. If I were starting out now and had to spend money to start, I'd get an RCBS Rock Chucker, or any heavy "O" press.
 
GONRA sez - lottsa great advice there!
Get A Really Big Single Stage Press....
 
My post from the Thread, "What kind of press(es) do you use?" :

1974-marked RCBS JR3 single stage press that I bought off of a fella in ~1978 when I lived in VaB.

In 2014 I bought a Lee Classic Turret and that has been my primary ever since.

The LCT I have used for pistol ammo and 5.56. When I need to hand-/re-load some of the heavier stuff (.30'06, .303, 7.92x57, etc ... I still have beaucoup decent milsurp on-hand) I will almost certainly be using the JR3 and the loading blocks.
:)
 
Do checkout the new RCBS Rebel.....bigger, beefier than even the venerable Rock Chucker, and finally has the spent primers taken care of....no more primers going places you don't want them to go. There is no on-press priming, but I prefer a dedicated bench primer anyway....better feel. There is only one single station press heavier than the Rebel, and that's Hornady's latest Iron Press. I haven't heard that much about that huge red one.....It's been out a while, so that surprises me.... Anyone with Iron Press experience?

I bought a LNL Classic (single-stage) press for my brother, to replace the RCBS Reloader Special press I 'stole' from him many years ago... I found it to be a sub-standard press in all regards. Very poor machining, very poor tolerances, and that sloppy LNL bushing nonsense. I eventually sold it off, and bought a friend's Rock Chucker instead. Maybe Hornady pulled the stops out on the Iron Press... I don't know, I haven't seen one, but it still has that nonsensical LNL bushing, which I believe introduces unacceptable variances. Just my .02 worth. Some people love the LNL, some don't. I'll spend the extra 15 seconds of my life to change a die out, knowing that it locks down snugly and gives me repeatable tolerances.

Currently I'm priming on-press,

Just FYI... the Reloader Special has, I believe, the absolutely best on-press primer mech evarrrrrr. Granted, you have to touch each and every primer, and I don't know if the newer RS3 presses come with the on-press primer setup.
 
Since you are going to need dies for the 375ruger anyways, consider buying them first. Try them with your current press and see. Personally I prefer other brands than lee for dies. I like Lyman, but have mostly RCBS.
 
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While I do have several other priming options, I always want a press w a priming arm. Why wouldn't you? Is also nice to be able to switch from an up stroke to a down stroke configuration.
 
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