I absolutely delight in my Lee APP press (he said, redundantly). Fastest way to decap and/or swage the factory primer crimp evah! Sizes cast boolits too, with the correct sizing die.
Thousands of cycles with the factory stationary plastic handle is a bit wearing on the palm, however.
Lee sells an accessory spinning handle ($23 at Midway, plus tax) that replaces the factory stationary plastic handle...
...but I thought I'd try making my own, seeing as I had a spare supply of 1-1/4" wood closet rod hanging about.
Parts:
-- One piece of 1-1/4" wood dowel, 3-7/8" long
-- Two 5/16" ID x 1/2" OD x 7/16" wide needle bearings from Amazon. $7
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
-- One 5/16-18 x 4-1/2" hex bolt (hacksaw a slot into the head for a screwdriver to fit): $1.50
-- One 5/16-18 flanged jam nut, and two thin 5/16" washers: $1.25
Workflow:
Cut the 1-1/4" wood dowel 3-7/8" long.
Center a 1/2" Forshner bit on one end, sink a hole about 3/8" deep. This lets the bearing protrude from the handle some.
Center a 5/8" Forshner bit on the outside end and drill deep enough to allow the bolt head to countersink into the wood.
Center a 1/2" Forshner bit in that 5/8" hole and drill 7/16" deeper to hold the outside bearing.
Finally, drill an oversized 5/16" hole all the way through the dowel, half from one end, half from the other, centering the bit in the Forshner countersinks you previously cut. This whole operation would be a lot easier if you used a lathe to form the handle and center the holes, but I made do with a drill press. The oversized through-hole allows the 5/16 bolt to slip through easier and a little internal clearance helps. Obviously, you want only the internal races of the bearings touching the stationary bolt, no wood.
Clamp the original steel yoke together to align the two metal straps. Remove the old plastic handle and, using an "F" size bit, drill and tap a 5/16-18 thread through the two steel yoke handles.
Press the bearings into the dowel, put a thin washer under the bolt head, push the bolt through both bearings, and another washer, then, using the slot you hacksawed into the bolt head and a flathead screwdriver, screw the bolt into the threaded yoke straps until it's snug but allows free spinning on the bearings.
Screw the jam nut on the outside to lock the bolt to the yoke. I varnished the dowel with several coats, so it's smooth and resists dirt.
Works like a charm during hundreds of cycles as I deprime and swage. Total cost about $10. You may have most of the parts on hand already.
See video and bearing review at Amazon:
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/customer...SIN=B07V6TWLGR
All that said, you could probably build this without the needle bearings and just let the wood slip against the bolt or a piece of 5/16-18 all-thread and a few washers and a couple of nuts. But the bearings make it glassy smooth to operate.