SIGP240 wrote:Just bought a 550 and don't like it. With it not being a fully progressive press, I do not consider it a high production machine. The machine has too close quarters design, requiring fast, thin articulated hands/wrists to do the yank, thrust, push, grab, sweep, thumb and yank on this toy. The 550 has a ******* "feel" for primer seating on the forward stroke. I still have my Green Machine which is a C H knockoff. It is scary fast, but only for the first 60 or so shells, then it is shutdown, refill repair and tweak time. RCBS had a good idea that turned into a nightmare on this one. The only (550)thing is, without case feed, no bulk primer feed, no auto-index and skimpy powder reserve, you have to have a kid help you keep the thing fed. I have been reloading for 47 years, and when I see 700 rnds/hr claims on these "starter" presses, I can't help wonder how many rounds you could actually do in an 8 hour day/session. Really men, how many guys single-handedly can stoke these cheap rigs to the tune of 6,000 rounds a day? On;y one thing I know fer sure, is I sold 6000 40 and 9mm empties to a guy, and he did them ALL ON A SINGLE STAGE PRESS AFTER POCKET SWAGING THEM. I'd be in surgery getting a new arm if it were me! IMHO, buy the bggest most spend tricked-out Dillon, it's only a little money!
SIGP240 wrote:Just bought a 550 and don't like it. With it not being a fully progressive press, I do not consider it a high production machine. The machine has too close quarters design, requiring fast, thin articulated hands/wrists to do the yank, thrust, push, grab, sweep, thumb and yank on this toy. The 550 has a ******* "feel" for primer seating on the forward stroke. I still have my Green Machine which is a C H knockoff. It is scary fast, but only for the first 60 or so shells, then it is shutdown, refill repair and tweak time. RCBS had a good idea that turned into a nightmare on this one. The only (550)thing is, without case feed, no bulk primer feed, no auto-index and skimpy powder reserve, you have to have a kid help you keep the thing fed. I have been reloading for 47 years, and when I see 700 rnds/hr claims on these "starter" presses, I can't help wonder how many rounds you could actually do in an 8 hour day/session. Really men, how many guys single-handedly can stoke these cheap rigs to the tune of 6,000 rounds a day? On;y one thing I know fer sure, is I sold 6000 40 and 9mm empties to a guy, and he did them ALL ON A SINGLE STAGE PRESS AFTER POCKET SWAGING THEM. I'd be in surgery getting a new arm if it were me! IMHO, buy the bggest most spend tricked-out Dillon, it's only a little money!
justaguy wrote:So how much are you selling it for?
hammAR wrote:justaguy wrote:So how much are you selling it for?
Make him an offer.......we can start the bidding anytime.......
What happens in the basement stays in the basement.
mnglocker wrote:<---- Just drank the Blue Kool-Aid.
I've got a 650 bolted to the Bench now and I'm thinking that my .223RCBS dies aren't going ot work for **** with this machine, due to the seating/crimping die having too deep of a throat and not being able to sufficiently crimp the bullet before the press bottoms out.
mnglocker wrote:<---- Just drank the Blue Kool-Aid.
I've got a 650 bolted to the Bench now and I'm thinking that my .223RCBS dies aren't going ot work for **** with this machine, due to the seating/crimping die having too deep of a throat and not being able to sufficiently crimp the bullet before the press bottoms out.
EJSG19 wrote:mnglocker wrote:<---- Just drank the Blue Kool-Aid.
I've got a 650 bolted to the Bench now and I'm thinking that my .223RCBS dies aren't going ot work for **** with this machine, due to the seating/crimping die having too deep of a throat and not being able to sufficiently crimp the bullet before the press bottoms out.
What was that an upgrade from? Congrats, time to make a serious pile of ammo.
What happens in the basement stays in the basement.
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