Wow, that's quite the dance routine going on in that vid.
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I still see a lot of extra motions happening there though.
I went from a single stage to a 5-station progressive because of my love for mechanical stuff.
I still had to place the bullet and add a case every cycle, so doing 2 things with my left hand, just like the turret vid guy, accept the finished round is ejected in my prior setup.
I cut down both the bullet and case container so I would not need to reach into/over them like the turret guy, and I built risers for each to get them closer to/up to press level.
I could then pick up a case or bullet by feel and keep my eyes on the press.
I have since added inline bullet feeders with long bullet tubes to my progressives and only load a case each cycle.
Each tube holds 50 bullets, so I stop at 50 rounds to change the bullet tube, and again at 100 rounds to change the primer tube and bullet tube again.
That bullet feeder increased output, a lot.
And keep in mind, any method of reloading can be broken into segments that need not to be done all at once in one seating.
I can load bullet or primer tubes while watching TV and not do both on the same night.
If off press priming is your preference, that too can be done away of the reloading bench/room.
If a caliber change is needed, it can be done in a single seating, without moving onto loading after the change-over.
So, my short answer is to skip the turret and get a progressive...even if it's only the Lee 2023 Pro1000.
Buy it stripped if you can and add an Auto Disc powder measure because of it's simplicity over the Auto Drum.
If I was in the market for a turret or progressive, I would be buying a Lee Six Pack Pro.
jmo,
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