No, I remodeled my 10'6" x 14' shed and had it wired up with a house panel for electric, it has a AC unit and a 220 wall electric heater. I am insulating it and need to finish off the inside. I will have
a dillion 650
a Dillon 550
A Hornaday AP
Two single-stage Hornaday Lock n Load presses
Two RCBS ROCKCHUCKER presses
A Redding T-7 press
A old Lyman C-press
A Lee challenger presses
Alex turret press
and a cheap lee press thar was free with his book
Set up out there so I need a bunch of powder measures, I have several trimmers, dial calipers, two Frankford Rotary Wet Tumblers, a few dry tumblers, lots of dies & brass, lots of manuals and other stuff.
Once I get it done I will be doing reloading classes.
I can probably find you one. I bought all of mine from ebay and off of the gun forums.
I do not trust electronic scales at all.
I had a decent electronic scale and I set a tray of powder on it that tested 100% on the Ohaus beam scale. It read ok, took the pan off the electronic scale it read OK, took it off and set it back down it read less, put it back on the Ohaus and it read correct, put it back on the electronic scale and got a different reading, set it back on the ohaus and it read correct.
I set up a RCBS and Hornady beam scales and set them to the powder weight and they both matched the Ohaus scale.
Right ten & there I quit useing electronics.
A friend swears by electronic scales, not me.
You are talking about tens of thousands per square inch of pressure on rifle cartridges, a 30/06 M1 Garand is 50,000 PSI max, regulat 30/06 is higher. I'm a gambler, but not with pressures that high.
I'll stick with old school trusted ways.