Just curious, did you check the OAL of the shells? Were they consistent?
Just curious, did you check the OAL of the shells? Were they consistent?
What I did...
I cleaned up a bunch of SPENT primers and used them to setup/debug the priming system of my loadmaster, without any other dies installed.
I used them over and over to tweak the adjustments until the priming system ran 100% BEFORE moving on to the next station (powder drop).
I suggest you do that while following along on the vid you posted:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs0LP77_r3I&t=606s
I had to use close captions because I could not hear the guy though!!
And consider the advice I posted about de-priming/chamfering in your other thread:
https://castboolits.gunloads.com/sho...=1#post5443827
Lots of you tube vids on the Loadmaster on youtube too.
jmo,
again, good luck on your quest.
Note: the comments from the blue fan boys are not helping this guy here.
Last edited by Kenstone; 08-21-2022 at 11:38 PM.
Size/Prime a few cases when starting off with a progressive and put them aside. You can plug them back into the process when a bad/odd case screws up in the priming station and continue loading.
Before I retired my Loadmaster this was my final setup. Deprime, clean, and prime brass off the press. Then station one size brass without depriming pin, station two flare and powder drop with Pro Disc, station three powder check die, station four set bullet by hand and seat with die set just enough to remove flare, and finally station five crimp. This is for pistol only, I’d never load rifle on a progressive press, that’s just me. I still finally retired this press simply because the system for rotating the shell plate is just too unreliable, at least in my case. I did load upwards of 10,000 rounds trying to just make this thing work before giving up and just going to the Classic Cast Turret. The Turret is just so simple, smooth, and utterly reliable it was a welcome relief from the headaches of the Loadmaster.
"Note: the comments from the blue fan boys are not helping this guy here."
What has anyone said that was out of line? I'm not trying to bash the guy. My main suggestion was to prime off press which is exactly what you are recommending. Lee's main downfall has always been the priming system. That was the only thing mentioned as a negative to the press. I wish him the best of luck because I have been in his position. I certainly did not sit down at my first Pro 1000 and start making good ammo. I'm only try to pass on my frustrating and at times expensive experience.
Well a few things...
1) I'm going to setup my loadmaster exactly how you did. And I'll be honest late yesterday evening I went back out and took her down to the basics and I ran into an indexing issue with the shell plate! It would index for about 4 strokes and then the indexing rod would be dead. Fixed that I think but sheesh! When it rains it pours!
2) I'm really thinking about getting a turret press to have on the side for rifle loading, especially my 300 blackout I plan to start. I don't know what brand I will do but more than likely Lee again. But maybe not, I haven't even looked into it yet.
3) I will get this Loadmaster working for me at some point, hopefully this week.
I just want to make this clear, if anyone here is thinking of buying a Lee product or a Loadmaster do not take my pitfalls to sway your decision. I'm the type of person that IF it could go wrong it will go wrong. Plus I literally just started less than 24 hours ago so it is some learning pains.
I might not even mess with getting the primer system to work for this simply because I would like to change around the loading process on the Loadmaster and this is something you CANNOT do unless you delete the priming station. The priming system very well might work fine, I'm just doing something wrong. But more than likely we just will never find out. I would like to skin the cat from a different angle that works better for me personally.
For one, l removed the index bar and hand index; it's smoother.
Two Be sure to lift the priming rocker arm so it and the punch aren't stuck down.
I quickly and manually slide the black primer slider into place before raising to prime. this prevents most of them from tipping over as they get into place. I think either my punch is short or the carrier frame is slightly deformed. The legs that support the rocker are fragile and can wear. It's a weak point. I use this press for match ammo because it's smooth and my special dies won't fit the Star loader
I dubbed my loadmaster as the lemonmaster for a reason. I gave up the on the priming system and I just prime off the press. I dont put anything on station 1 due to too many ruined brass from the shell feeder rocker being finicky. I mainly use it for 308+ progressive loading; it's faster than the turret; I've settled down on this process;
- decap and resize if the brass is clean enough after firing on station #3 (didn't touch the ground/not sooted up); When re-sizing stout cases, i.e. annealed 7.5swiss brass back to k11 specs fired from a k31, the shell carriage (atleast myns does) has a tendency to mis-align from the ram no matter how tight I set the carriage, causing indexing issues. This is primarily why I size separately from the rest of the processes.
- tumble cases clean, brass prep (trim, swage, inspect, chamfer/debur, etc.)
- Prime off the press; Done with a lee ram prime installed on a turret/APP press (I reload mixed HS brass, some pockets tighter that others and the ram prime seems to really seat them in for reliable firing).
- Running primed cases, I neck expand on station #2 (for casts), powder drop on station #3, check powder and seat the bullet on station #4, crimp on #5. Indexing is smooth and straightforward.
Overall, I'm content on what my loadmaster does. I reserve my lee auto breech lock pro as the dedicated 9mm progressive loader; this press has the same type of priming system as the lee turret press (simply just a primer arm to just handfeed into from the downstroke). I run all stations for 9mm:
- starting with clean, lubed 9mm and inspected cases (culling out the stepped cases, crappy norma small flash hole brass, military brass, etc.); resize/decap on station #1. Lubed cases makes a big difference in sizing effort vs. unlubed.
- starter install primer on primer arm, prime 9mm case on the upstroke; charge powder on station #2 on the downstroke while inspecting station #1 shell feed into resize decapper. Install another primer on primer arm from the down stroke for the next case in line.
- Upstroke to seat primer, install bullet to seat on station #3.
- Downstroke to seat bullet, install primer.
- repeat last two steps with station #4 applying crimp.
I gave up after a year if messing with my loadmaster, I too had issues in figuring things out, and believe me, I really wanted this to work. Sold it on Craigslist within a couple of days and was much happier. That's just me, If I can't adapt to it in a period of time, it's going somewhere else. I gave it my best shot. YMMV
I've got 2 single stage presses and enjoy them, a Lyman and a Hornady. I may try a turret in the future if funds become available.
Slim
Last edited by slim1836; 08-22-2022 at 05:28 PM.
JUST GOTTA LOVE THIS JOINT.
Try watching GunBlue's videos on the press.
The timing and alignment are easy to adjust.
The press cannot be slammed as hard and as fast as you can go. Figure 400 per hour. A primer cup on a turret or Single stage press has to be learned to properly seat primers.
Most problems are a misunderstanding of the directions.
I guess you could say I'm a Lee guy.
It's been one day. Just take a deep breath. You can figure this out. No matter what problem I'm working on, reloading or not, I like to start with the easiest first. In this instance it sounds like you have indexing problems, and since you have only owned this for a day, I'm going to assume you have not 100% dialed this press in yet. I think you will find any priming issues are a lot easier to solve when things are working smooth as they should be.
Unfortunately I don't know much about the loadmaster. Mine is a Pro 1000. On the Pro 1000 it has an indexing ratchet. It also has a screw to advance or retard the timing of the shell plate. It's a stupid simple system with very little issues. I've never had a problem with it myself. I just watched a video on the loadmaster indexing system and it is nothing alike. It definitely doesn't look as slick as a pro 1000. I've not heard of a ton of indexing problems with the loadmaster though, so I'm sure whatever your issue is can be solved. A quick google search found a reference to the case ejector possibly binding if misadjusted. Another reference makes it sound like you can rotate the entire shell carrier on the ram, and this has to be rotated so the indexing rod is tight against the frame. The very first thing you should do is sit down with the instructions. There is likely something in there that has been missed. Lee instructions are usually good, most problems can be solved from them.
I wouldn't load any ammo until the press is working. You would only be wasting time. I set my presses up one thing at a time. I don't even have dies in until I have my case feeder and shell plate set up perfectly. Then you can adjust one die at a time. I wouldn't even mess with your powder measure until the very last step. Again, like primers, you are likely to get much more consistent results when everything else is working smooth. Having to bang and jam your way though is never going to produce consistent powder drops.
It simply converts any press that can accept single stage shell holders into a single stage bench priming system. I used to hand prime with an RCBS hand prime system, but it gets arthritis inducing pretty fast when you got over 1k+ to prime, or you got that one case with a tight primer pocket that refuses to seat properly using the hand primer tool.
I was looking into getting the lee ACP (auto case prime) press as it is supposed to be a lee APP repurposed for universal case auto priming.
My RCBS Pow'r Pull finally gave up the ghost tonight. The handle broke off where the narrow part meets the thicker grip portion several years ago so I Gorilla taped a piece of 3/4" PVC pipe on to get through what I was doing at the moment. Never got around to getting a warranty replacement and was using it again tonight. The end that gets all of the punishment is developing a lot of cracks so I quit using it and sent a note to RCBS. I'm afraid it will shatter explosively if I continue to use it. I can't complain, though. I bought it either in 1991 or 2006; not sure which.
The RCBS seems to be a different design to me. The other all plastic designs have an angular web compared to the smooth curves of the RCBS. The pullers with an aluminum shank may be PK but putting metal into the plastic looks like a place to concentrate stresses to me. The all plastic design of the RCBS with its curved web looks like it would be better at distributing stresses. I have a scrap of engineered beam that's 4" thick and about 16" square. It sits on an edge and I whack the kinetic puller on the top edge. It's quieter and works much better than clamping a sacrificial piece of lumber to a bench top. Using a bench/table top takes may times as many hits to dislodge a boolit. For jacketed, I use an RCBS collet puller whenever I can.
Sometimes life taps you on the shoulder and reminds you it's a one way street. Jim Morris
The Lee Loadmaster is an excellent press, but like all Lee progressives, does not have a reliable priming system.
It's worth keeping it, and using a workaround for the priming.
You can deprime all your brass on the press, that will go quickly.
Then prime seperately. The Lee bench prime looks like a reliable little machine. I don't have one myself, but the reviews seem positive.
Once you reload with primed brass, the Loadmaster can run like a clock.
Duane from 480BC put together excellent video instructions for setting up and tuning the Loadmaster. He advocates using the priming system - I just differ on that.
I always said that if the Loadmaster had come out with a reliable priming system, Lee would have owned the progressive reloader market, and I would have had a dedicated Loadmaster setup for every caliber I reload for.
Last edited by 414gates; 08-23-2022 at 04:25 AM. Reason: spelling, grammar
Hmm, hand indexing sounds interesting. Kind of makes it similar to operate like a Dillon 550. The auto advance feature has always been the biggest problem for me to keep working consistently. There’s a gizmo on Etsy for around $20.00 that looks like it might fix the auto advance feature I’m tempted to try. The thing about the Loadmaster that’s so frustrating is that when it’s working good it’s a marvelous machine that makes excellent ammo. But when it stops working I just want to take a sledge hammer and smash it to pieces, and this happens way too much.
Evangelical, deplorable redneck and proud of it.
I started with a Dillon 550B and still use it mostly. Bought the Loadmaster a few years back to dedicate to 40 and 9mm. I too get very frustrated with the priming system. Other than that, it works great. Never had any other issues with powder drop or the like on it. The Loadmaster is the only press I have ever had a primer pop on me. Had it happen once and every time I use it now, my butt cheeks tighten up.
One problem I see with it is, you are sizing the brass and seating the primer at the same time. Therefore if it is harder for some reason, you don't know if it is the primer or the brass. This makes it hard to tell whether something is wrong or not. On the Dillon, if you feel something amiss with the primer step, you know it is the primer because that is all you are doing at that time.
I did find lubing brass, especially 9mm, seems to help the feel of the press.
Rosewood
Evangelical, deplorable redneck and proud of it.
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
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