Caseknife
Well-known member
Think I started loading 38/357 initially many, many years ago to feed my college days handgun shooting habit. In fact the Speer #10 manual was my first. Initially it will seem that it is not cost effective, but in the long term it definitely is. The one thing that it does provide is the ability to shoot more and get comfortable. I reload a couple dozen cartridges now and don't let the availability of factory ammo dictate what my next rifle will be, hence the 338 Federal that will be accompanying me to Wyoming in a couple weeks. Couldn't find brass, no problem, resized 308 Win. Ditto the self-reliance aspect, I have plenty of ammo for all my firearms and the only factory stuff is rimfire, and if I am getting a bit short, head to the reloading bench.
Invest in a few reloading manuals and read them front to back to get your mind wrapped around the process. I have probably a dozen manuals at this time and am always thumbing through them for bits of information, can get immersed on those cold winter days. I'm kind of old school in that I prefer to have something in hand other than my phone for information, paper maps, compass, reloading manuals, service manuals, etc.
The accuracy thing is that you can tailor loads to your particular rifle with reloading.
Invest in a few reloading manuals and read them front to back to get your mind wrapped around the process. I have probably a dozen manuals at this time and am always thumbing through them for bits of information, can get immersed on those cold winter days. I'm kind of old school in that I prefer to have something in hand other than my phone for information, paper maps, compass, reloading manuals, service manuals, etc.
The accuracy thing is that you can tailor loads to your particular rifle with reloading.