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Tannert

Got a Dillion RL 550C...Could use some help now....

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Guy at my office bought an RL 550C at a silent auction, long story short I ended up buying it from him with zero reloading knowledge.

 

I am wanting to reload 223 and 9MM.

 

From the little bit I have read it seems this machine can do both.

 

I ordered the scale and thats as far as I have got.

 

My questions are...

 

What else do I need besides brass, powder, primers and bullets?

 

Also, any recommendations on what Brass, powder, primers and bullets to get and from where.

 

I am looking to load plinking ammo. Nothing special.

 

Any input helps. Thanks in advance.

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Tannery, you could swing by Dillion as well, they are always willing to help and have great customer service

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Tannery, you could swing by Dillion as well, they are always willing to help and have great customer service

 

Vowell,

 

Thank you for the recommendation. I will definitely try to do that.

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Buy a copy of "ABC s of reloading". Read it 3 times before you do any reloading. Then read some more. If you have someone knowledgeable and experienced have them show you as much as they are willing to teach.

 

Reloading is simple if done right and insanely intricate and dangerous at the same time.

 

Welcome to the insanity.

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I am not familiar with the setup and adjustment of the 550 but I understand that press is a good one. Once you get it set up its the same process as any other as far as basic reloading stages on a progressive.

 

Size/deprime/prime, case flare/powder drop, bullet seat, case neck crimp (depending on your die choice)

 

Read all you can on the fundamentals of reloading but I would also recommend stopping by Dillon for the set up tips they will offer.

 

My biggest piece of advice would be to fully grasp the concept/fundamentals of the process and work through slowly and strive for consistency. The speed of a progressive will come eventually. Work to create perfect and safe ammo first not lots of ammo.

 

A word of caution for 9mm and other small cases. The difference between starting loads and maximum loads reaching dangerous pressures is not very much. Some cases can be less than .5 gr difference or 1/14,000 of a pound! Be sure your scale is calibrated and you are measuring powder weight as accurately as possible.

 

Lots of info here too.

https://www.dillonprecision.com/bl-550-basic-loader_8_1_25792.html

http://brianenos.com/pages/dillon

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I am not familiar with the setup and adjustment of the 550 but I understand that press is a good one. Once you get it set up its the same process as any other as far as basic reloading stages on a progressive.

 

Size/deprime/prime, case flare/powder drop, bullet seat, case neck crimp (depending on your die choice)

 

Read all you can on the fundamentals of reloading but I would also recommend stopping by Dillon for the set up tips they will offer.

 

My biggest piece of advice would be to fully grasp the concept/fundamentals of the process and work through slowly and strive for consistency. The speed of a progressive will come eventually. Work to create perfect and safe ammo first not lots of ammo.

 

A word of caution for 9mm and other small cases. The difference between starting loads and maximum loads reaching dangerous pressures is not very much. Some cases can be less than .5 gr difference or 1/14,000 of a pound! Be sure your scale is calibrated and you are measuring powder weight as accurately as possible.

 

Lots of info here too.

https://www.dillonprecision.com/bl-550-basic-loader_8_1_25792.html

http://brianenos.com/pages/dillon

 

 

Thank you very much for all of this great advice!! This is very very helpful!

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I have one as well and load everything from 9 mm to 300 Ultra on it. It's a very versatile machine. Mine is 30 years old and still going strong .

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I have the video from Dillon for that press, could send it your way, also I would buy the lumen reloading book and read the front and you should have a good grasp then

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If you do call Dillon Customer Service, ask for Lucas. He'll walk you thru everything and answer all your questions.

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I have the video from Dillon for that press, could send it your way, also I would buy the lumen reloading book and read the front and you should have a good grasp then

I would be willing to pay for that and shipping! Just let me know.

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If you do call Dillon Customer Service, ask for Lucas. He'll walk you thru everything and answer all your questions.

DUG,

 

Thank you! I will do that!

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