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dajarrel

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Posts posted by dajarrel

  1. Doesn't really pertain to loading your mags but don't forget to put your loaded mags on your belt. Watched a GM production shooter make ready with his barney mag. Buzzer went off and he merrily shot his first 10 rounds and reached for the next mag. His hand went all the way around his belt.... no mags. He looked at the RO with a "what do I do now" look. RO said "if you are finished, unload and show clear". Zeroed the stage but I think he still won his division. 

  2. I too, went the red press route because it was all I could afford. A year later, a 550. a couple of years later and my family bought me a 650. I've never loaded on a 1050 but I understand it is considered a commercial machine so the no BS warranty is out the window. 

    I can't imagine having loaded all the rounds I've loaded in the last 14 years on a red press.

    OBTW, I use a rock chucker for my rifle rounds and .50 cal pistol rounds. The thing is a beast!!!

    dj

  3. It really doesn't take much to go a long way. I put a couple hundred pieces in a two pound coffee container, spray with a 3-4 second burst and shake the brass up to spread it around. Then I throw it in the case feeder of my 650. 

    I've never seen nor detected any primer or powder fouling. They just go boom.

    fwiw

    dj

  4. When shooting revolver, (or production/single stack) always remember; If you're moving, reload. Yeah, you will put unfired rounds on the ground but you reach the next array with a fully loaded gun and minimize standing reloads. There are always exceptions but I have found this to work well for me when I shoot revolver!!

    fwiw

    dj

  5. 14 minutes ago, IHAVEGAS said:

    Would be interesting to know how it was possible to crush (ignite) a primer that was still in close proximity to the primers in the tube. I have had a primer go off in a press once (550) but can't figure out how you could ignite the stack in any of the Dillons . 

    The only time I know of multiple primers igniting involved bad storage habits and use of a torch near the reloading bench :surprise: . 

    I can tell you that if you have a federal primer not fully aligned with the brass and you force it, you can set it off. In my 650, it propagated around the primer wheel and set off almost 100 primers in the tube. I found the primer follower rod stuck in the ceiling bent into a "Z" shape. That being said, I use Federal primers on all my revolver loads and Winchester SPP or SRP on everything else. Tried Tula and they didn't work for me.

     

    fwiw

     

    dj

  6. I carry a Springfield Milspec .45 in the door pocket of my truck. I take it out and shoot a local match with it every couple of months. I drop a bit of oil on it occasionally and when it gets nasty, I clean it. I've had it 6-7 years and it never hiccups. Doesn't mean it won't dump on me the next time I use it....its mechanical. But it has been reliable.

    The only work I had done on it was minor polishing of internal parts for reliability maintaining factory trigger pull and stuff for liability sake.

    FWIW

    dj

  7. Once and a while, I will get a craving for Hams or Olympia :cheers:

    Olympia Beer... I haven't had one of those in 35+ years since I was stationed on Guam while in the Navy. I wish you could get it in the southeast!!!!!

    dj

  8. Death in comic books (and comic book based movies) is often a transitory experience. Really, they should replace the Pearly Gates with a revolving door.

    FWIW, I agree.

    I think Prof X will come back in the "body without a personality" he alluded to in one of his lectures and was later shown as a kind of stinger at the end of credits of the last movie.

    Yup...I like the revolving door analogy!!!!

    dj

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