Nice video man. The note inside the box is such a solid tip, I started doing that recently and it helps alot. If I’m moving the stuff from one container to another I write out all the steps that it still needs and they get crossed off, and the note travels with the brass. Easy to think you won’t forget where you were at while you’re doing it until you go back later 😂
Oh man, do I hear you. My reloading area looks like a tornado hit it. I've been doing a bunch of crimped stuff I've swaged about 3500 cases mechanically! That creates a lot of brass swarf (shavings, chips, etc), I'm constantly brushing them up. I also run a 3d print version of a WFT also on the same press, even more swarf!
I completely got rid of the post-it notes all together. What I do is write in permanent marker on top of the box’s. When I’m ready to get rid of that information. I hit it with goof off marker remover I think I paid 4 bucks for a big bottle of goof off. Good video nonetheless!!!!! notes notes notes write em keep ‘em guard em
Maybe you will answer my question. I have two different AR's. One chambered in 556 and the other in 223 Wylde. The 556 bumps the shoulder up by about .006 while the 223 Wylde bumps the shoulder about .003. Do I need to reload for each rifle, or is there a way to reload one size for both chambers? Thanks.
Depends on tooling and manufacture of the chamber reamers lots of things that come into play on it. If your curious how much different you can look at the reamer prints between the two just Google it
I like the post it tabs! I have been using index cards in ammo and brass boxes to keep notes
Blue narrow painters tape it the way forward!
Nice video man. The note inside the box is such a solid tip, I started doing that recently and it helps alot. If I’m moving the stuff from one container to another I write out all the steps that it still needs and they get crossed off, and the note travels with the brass. Easy to think you won’t forget where you were at while you’re doing it until you go back later 😂
100% true
Oh man, do I hear you. My reloading area looks like a tornado hit it. I've been doing a bunch of crimped stuff I've swaged about 3500 cases mechanically! That creates a lot of brass swarf (shavings, chips, etc), I'm constantly brushing them up. I also run a 3d print version of a WFT also on the same press, even more swarf!
thanks for promoting organization of the bench :)
Enjoyed the video. Good notes are essential.
I completely got rid of the post-it notes all together. What I do is write in permanent marker on top of the box’s. When I’m ready to get rid of that information. I hit it with goof off marker remover I think I paid 4 bucks for a big bottle of goof off. Good video nonetheless!!!!! notes notes notes write em keep ‘em guard em
Wait till that tape really sticks down to the plastic , and the pvc pipe could be replaced with rain gutter's .
Maybe you will answer my question. I have two different AR's. One chambered in 556 and the other in 223 Wylde. The 556 bumps the shoulder up by about .006 while the 223 Wylde bumps the shoulder about .003. Do I need to reload for each rifle, or is there a way to reload one size for both chambers? Thanks.
If you are worried about brass life yes if not you can always resize them to fit in the tighter chamber and will work in both guns
And most will say for best accuracy to load according to the chamber in that specific rifle
@@theaveragereloader7222 Thanks. I did not realize the sizes would be so different between the 556 and 223 wylde chambers.
Depends on tooling and manufacture of the chamber reamers lots of things that come into play on it. If your curious how much different you can look at the reamer prints between the two just Google it
The average reloader does not buy containers. They recycle other plastic containers. I have containers from the late 70's I am still using.
Agreed - I keep our coffee containers & laundry soap jugs !!!