Wm Cook
08-23-2020, 10:30 AM
There was a nice string a while back that asked a question about the value vs cost difference between a Lee 4 die set for (I think) 9mm and Redding. That was a good read and a couple opinions popped up. One being that “they all go bang when you pull the trigger, so what’s the problem” and the other was “If it’s a four and one group” it’s a pattern and not a group.
I have to admit I’m in the latter’s camp. My belief is that all boolits should go through the same hole. If they don’t it's because of 1) the nut behind the trigger, 2) wind, 3) the platform can’t do it in its current configuration or it could be a host of other things that could range from load components, lack of load development, seating depth, powder choice, scope power, scope quality, parallax, bench techniques and many more things.
Other than the nut behind the trigger and wind most of the rest can be sorted out with money and developing your handloading skill. Now some rifles are a whole lot easier than others to get you to shooting consistent small groups. Case in point is my Ruger 77/22 K Hornet. I’ve done most everything I can to it including, bedding, re-chambering, triggers job, bolt springs, bolt shims etc. and the best I could get was MOA. But to me that rifle was more fun than I can describe. I had many MANY hours playing with various cast bullets, powders, primers and seating depth to get that sub sonic MOA I was looking for. It wasn’t quick but puzzles like that for me are a challenge and not seen as a problem. Sure it would have been a slam dunk with the CZ but that wouldn’t have given me the hours of experimentation and education that the Ruger gave me. I guess you can tell by now that I am retired.
In fact for me, it’s somewhat anticlimactic when I get a new firearm and load development is a fairly quick affair. An example is my old varmint 700 BDL from the mid 90’s. Originally chambered in .223, and shortly after a .223 AI barrel was added. On a whim last year I had it converted to a switch bolt so I could shoot .308 bolt face as well as the .223 bolt face. I bought a (new) take-off stock OEM .308 varmint barrel and a bolt from PTG. Bing bang boom, a combination of the NOE 165-FN-H3, Bullseye, seated on the lands and I wind up with 1,083 fps, 5.5 to 7.0 SD and sub MOA. As a disclaimer this rig’s been glass bedded, it has a Jewell hunter trigger that breaks at 1 ¼ lbs., I shoot over flags and this rifle and the rifle and I have a long history together.
But I read in the earlier mentioned post that many of us are perfectly happy hearing the “bang” of the fired round, feel the recoil and then hear the “clang” sound of lead hitting a steel plate. I lean heavily towards reading the wind, bench technique, load development where the objective is to be able to shoot five, five shot groups that agg in the teens. But I'm now starting to understand that there’s room between the extremes for accuracy expectations. I guess I’m just trying to say that accuracy is relevant.
Which brings us back to the original topic which is about the cost and expectation of accuracy: The past couple months my interest has shifted into areas other than benchrest competition. The firearms coming in include a Ruger Mini 30 and a Ruger 9mm PC Carbine. Neither are benchrest platforms.
And as I sorted through reloading equipment and the munitions that I needed to buy to feed both rifles the Lee Precision company kept coming into focus.
I didn’t hesitate with the Ruger M30 and went for the Redding neck sizing die, Wilson seater, Wilson case trimmer, Lapua brass etc. etc. Old habits die hard. When I went to the 9mm PC I took a right hand turn. First came 1500 pieces of range brass from Graf’s, 1,500 pieces of Laser Cast’s 124 grain RN for quick gratification and a 124 grain HP mold from MP Mold’s. That was soon followed with a Lee Classic turret press. Why a turret press? Well handgun reloading always mixes me up. With all of the flaring, crimping and such required I just thought that all four dies on a single press dedicated to a single caliber made sense. Price was reasonable and I could get the press up and running for less than $150 with the Lee four die set. But when I bought the Lee turret press the worm really turned. With the press came the Lee catalog and I was surprised to see the innovation that Lee has brought to the market with very cost effective reloading equipment.
As I said, when I bought the press I had no intention of using it as true turret press to mass produce 9mm, but after seeing the range of products (and their prices) Lee has from their powder measures, primer seater and such I kind of got the itch to assemble a functioning turret press as it is designed to do. And I was impressed that other than the heating coil for their casting pots everything seems to be made here in the US. It’s hard for me to say that there are options to in line seaters, handloading for sub .0xx MOA groups and adjusting seating depth a few thousands at a time but I think this is going to be fun. The Lee is not a Dillon but I’m guessing that it’s decent enough that I can put a few hundred rounds together a lot quicker than I could load them one by one. I know I’m giving up some accuracy but the expectations are smaller when you’re shooting steel plates. I’ll leave the choice of mold manufacturers out of the conversation for now. To me there's still something sacred about projectiles.
Will I tweak seating depth, powder charge, primers and boolits on both the 7.62 M30 and the 9mm PC carbines? Yep. It’s in my blood. I can’t help but chase accuracy. I have a 10 meter range in my shop, both rifles have suppressors and my reloading bench is a few steps away from my shooting bench. If I shoot .25" groups at that distance it'll be no less than 3 to 5 MOA. If I can put five shots under .075 I have a chance that it may be in the 1 to 2 MOA range. And it's really cool to put all five into a .025" group. Don't care if its 10 meters or 100 yards. One hole groups are pretty to look at.
Will I mass produce using the Lee classic turret press on the 9mm and shoot steel plates where the difference between 1 to 3 MOA won’t even be noticed? Yep again. I got a 13 year old grandson that will have a heck of a good time shooting steel with the little 6lb PC suppressed Carbine.
Maybe this pandemic thing is getting to me. The next thing you know I’ll be eating kale and hummus. Bill.
PS. The thought of that powder measure going 360 degrees one lever crank at a time and its ability to drop constant powder charges scares the dickens out of me. Good shooting to all.
I have to admit I’m in the latter’s camp. My belief is that all boolits should go through the same hole. If they don’t it's because of 1) the nut behind the trigger, 2) wind, 3) the platform can’t do it in its current configuration or it could be a host of other things that could range from load components, lack of load development, seating depth, powder choice, scope power, scope quality, parallax, bench techniques and many more things.
Other than the nut behind the trigger and wind most of the rest can be sorted out with money and developing your handloading skill. Now some rifles are a whole lot easier than others to get you to shooting consistent small groups. Case in point is my Ruger 77/22 K Hornet. I’ve done most everything I can to it including, bedding, re-chambering, triggers job, bolt springs, bolt shims etc. and the best I could get was MOA. But to me that rifle was more fun than I can describe. I had many MANY hours playing with various cast bullets, powders, primers and seating depth to get that sub sonic MOA I was looking for. It wasn’t quick but puzzles like that for me are a challenge and not seen as a problem. Sure it would have been a slam dunk with the CZ but that wouldn’t have given me the hours of experimentation and education that the Ruger gave me. I guess you can tell by now that I am retired.
In fact for me, it’s somewhat anticlimactic when I get a new firearm and load development is a fairly quick affair. An example is my old varmint 700 BDL from the mid 90’s. Originally chambered in .223, and shortly after a .223 AI barrel was added. On a whim last year I had it converted to a switch bolt so I could shoot .308 bolt face as well as the .223 bolt face. I bought a (new) take-off stock OEM .308 varmint barrel and a bolt from PTG. Bing bang boom, a combination of the NOE 165-FN-H3, Bullseye, seated on the lands and I wind up with 1,083 fps, 5.5 to 7.0 SD and sub MOA. As a disclaimer this rig’s been glass bedded, it has a Jewell hunter trigger that breaks at 1 ¼ lbs., I shoot over flags and this rifle and the rifle and I have a long history together.
But I read in the earlier mentioned post that many of us are perfectly happy hearing the “bang” of the fired round, feel the recoil and then hear the “clang” sound of lead hitting a steel plate. I lean heavily towards reading the wind, bench technique, load development where the objective is to be able to shoot five, five shot groups that agg in the teens. But I'm now starting to understand that there’s room between the extremes for accuracy expectations. I guess I’m just trying to say that accuracy is relevant.
Which brings us back to the original topic which is about the cost and expectation of accuracy: The past couple months my interest has shifted into areas other than benchrest competition. The firearms coming in include a Ruger Mini 30 and a Ruger 9mm PC Carbine. Neither are benchrest platforms.
And as I sorted through reloading equipment and the munitions that I needed to buy to feed both rifles the Lee Precision company kept coming into focus.
I didn’t hesitate with the Ruger M30 and went for the Redding neck sizing die, Wilson seater, Wilson case trimmer, Lapua brass etc. etc. Old habits die hard. When I went to the 9mm PC I took a right hand turn. First came 1500 pieces of range brass from Graf’s, 1,500 pieces of Laser Cast’s 124 grain RN for quick gratification and a 124 grain HP mold from MP Mold’s. That was soon followed with a Lee Classic turret press. Why a turret press? Well handgun reloading always mixes me up. With all of the flaring, crimping and such required I just thought that all four dies on a single press dedicated to a single caliber made sense. Price was reasonable and I could get the press up and running for less than $150 with the Lee four die set. But when I bought the Lee turret press the worm really turned. With the press came the Lee catalog and I was surprised to see the innovation that Lee has brought to the market with very cost effective reloading equipment.
As I said, when I bought the press I had no intention of using it as true turret press to mass produce 9mm, but after seeing the range of products (and their prices) Lee has from their powder measures, primer seater and such I kind of got the itch to assemble a functioning turret press as it is designed to do. And I was impressed that other than the heating coil for their casting pots everything seems to be made here in the US. It’s hard for me to say that there are options to in line seaters, handloading for sub .0xx MOA groups and adjusting seating depth a few thousands at a time but I think this is going to be fun. The Lee is not a Dillon but I’m guessing that it’s decent enough that I can put a few hundred rounds together a lot quicker than I could load them one by one. I know I’m giving up some accuracy but the expectations are smaller when you’re shooting steel plates. I’ll leave the choice of mold manufacturers out of the conversation for now. To me there's still something sacred about projectiles.
Will I tweak seating depth, powder charge, primers and boolits on both the 7.62 M30 and the 9mm PC carbines? Yep. It’s in my blood. I can’t help but chase accuracy. I have a 10 meter range in my shop, both rifles have suppressors and my reloading bench is a few steps away from my shooting bench. If I shoot .25" groups at that distance it'll be no less than 3 to 5 MOA. If I can put five shots under .075 I have a chance that it may be in the 1 to 2 MOA range. And it's really cool to put all five into a .025" group. Don't care if its 10 meters or 100 yards. One hole groups are pretty to look at.
Will I mass produce using the Lee classic turret press on the 9mm and shoot steel plates where the difference between 1 to 3 MOA won’t even be noticed? Yep again. I got a 13 year old grandson that will have a heck of a good time shooting steel with the little 6lb PC suppressed Carbine.
Maybe this pandemic thing is getting to me. The next thing you know I’ll be eating kale and hummus. Bill.
PS. The thought of that powder measure going 360 degrees one lever crank at a time and its ability to drop constant powder charges scares the dickens out of me. Good shooting to all.