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Cuz

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Posts posted by Cuz

  1. 11 hours ago, Skeeter44 said:

    Is the draw from hands at waist or hands on head? Strangely, my hands on head draw is faster than at waist, but my reloads are faster than either lol

     

    This seems to always be the case because you can whip your hands down faster onto the gun, rather than raising them up over the gun and then down onto the gun to get your grip before drawing.  I don't know of anyone who is faster from "hands relaxed at sides" than they are with "wrists above shoulders".  But, then again, we are just a bunch of B, C, and D shooters.

     

    And, my draw is still faster.  I really wish I wasn't too lazy to get some dry fire practice in.  I understand the "Burkett Reloads" drill is great, but there is always something else that needs to be done...

  2. I had good luck going to each of the preferred online dealers listed on the Trijicon website and requesting a notification when the item was back in stock. In two cases it took less than a week for one of them to email me. Actually, there was a third too, but by the time I saw the email they were gone. If you do this, you should also create an account on each of those sites to speed up checkout when you get notified. It’s more than likely they will get a dozen or so in, and send out 100 email notices so you have to act fast. Mine were both the 5MOA dot size. 

  3. I got an email notice from MidwayUSA saying they had a limited quantity of Mark 7 auto drive Pro for Dillon 1050/1100 press in stock. 
     

    I opted not to order one. The more I use my press, I only find I’d like to automate when I’m processing brass. During the loading phase I tend to stop too often to either make an adjustment, verify a charge weight, etc.  During last nights loading session, out of about 1000 rounds, there were exactly 6 times that the bullet wouldn’t stay on the case when the shell plate rotated. At first I was annoyed, until I found that in all 6 instances, it was due to a cracked case. 
     

    I think I am still learning too much about how this press works to consider automating. For now at least, I’ll stay in manual mode. 
     

  4. 6 hours ago, Boomstick303 said:

     

    Who’s thicker guide is that?  Did you switch them out on all of your tool heads?


    lol, we are worse than a bunch of chicks hanging out at the mall. “Oooh, did you see that purse?  Where did she get it?  I have to have one!”

     

    I can’t friggin believe how many “necessities” I’ve bought in the last couple of weeks just from these 3 threads we’ve all been hangin out in. 
     

    Now that Johnny has shared that pic of his “purse”, I absolutely have to have one for each of my toolheads. Where did he say we could get them???

  5. 9 hours ago, Johnnymazz said:

    Cuz if you load the 2 pass way, that will be much easier for a beginner. It takes the stress out of watching all the stations for mistakes. Ive loaded in excess of 40,000 rounds in the last 2 years. I still run the 2 pass system. The commercial loaders use the same process. Especially if you run automated like I have been for the last 2 plus years. Hope that helps.


    thanks, I agree that when I went to 2 passes the stress level went down. I no longer worry about primers not getting ejected.  I find I can crank the handle a good deal faster on the first pass and then slow down and focus a bit more on the loading pass. 

  6. 2 hours ago, JDIllon said:

    With all due respect, you asked for input on running the press without the ratchet? And are give us all of your reasons for not doing it. As you have heard, most of us run without the ratchet. That works for us! You should do what ever feels right for you. Quite frankly I have found that solving stoppages is easier without the ratchet. Just my .02. JD 


    lol, obviously you can tell that my comfort level with my 1100 isn’t quite there yet. My biggest fear is that with the ability to quickly load large quantities of ammo, I also have the ability to screw up large quantities of ammo. I keep that container of about 150 rounds I loaded without primers right by the press as a reminder to proceed cautiously and ask a lot of questions. 

  7. 6 hours ago, ezra650 said:

    Also implementing an index dwell into your arm movement helps a lot. I recently found I'm much more consistent on handle throw when I'm sitting down on my elevated bar stool. I still load standing up as well, but my cadence/RPH is a bit slower because I can't keep it as consistent/smooth. 
     

     

    Please explain what you mean be dwell in your arm movement?

    Thanks.

  8. My biggest problem with this is that when I encounter a problem, before I think too deeply, I raise the handle to see what's going on.  With my RL550, this was never a problem, but with the RL1100, this causes the loaded round that was just about to get crimped to advance and drop into my bin of loaded ammo.  Now I have a bin of loaded rounds and one of them didn't get crimped.  Unfortunately, this will keep me up at night, unless I now pull all the rounds out of the machine and individually run them all thru the crimping die.

     

    I HATE it when that happens.  The ratchet prevents me from doing this, and gives me time to remove the loaded ammo bin before releasing the ratchet to raise the handle.

     

  9. 11 minutes ago, George16 said:

    And that’s exactly what I did after receiving and setting up my RL1100. It works really good.

     

    I still have an extra ratchet with the extra tool head I bought if I decide to reinstall it in the future (I don’t think I will though 😆).


    Here’s a pic.

    CFD14-B4-D-D2-DA-4153-8-B05-50-DCA2-E437
     

     

    After I said that I got to thinking it might just be easier to remove the ratchet tab parts instead. It should have the same affect, right?

  10. If you guys are not using the ratchet, why not just cut off the ratchet part and use the top portion as the spacer?

     

    And, this is probably a better thread to discuss some of the problems/issues I’m having with the RL1100 than the 2 pass thread, now that we’ve verified that nobody runs dirty brass they the first pass. 

  11. 56 minutes ago, highxj said:

    Just curious, are you guys removing the ratchet itself? When I set mine up, I removed the locking tab rather than the ratchet, because I didn't have anything handy to properly space out the cam bolt back to where it should be. But the ratchet itself is a PITA when manipulating the toolhead etc. I need to find some proper washers or machine a spacer for the cam bolt...

    Why would you have to space out the cam bolt?  It looks long enough to work just fine without the ratchet. 

  12. Are you guys using the ratchet on any of your toolheads?  
     

    I don’t use it on my processing toolhead, but I’m not quite confident enough to remove it from my loading toolhead. But it’s giving me fits. I can’t seem to get the release lever mechanism to function correctly. Either it won’t get locked back at the end of the down stroke, or it doesn’t always release at the top of the up stroke. Other times it doesn’t engage the ratchet. One of the Dillon tech support guys commented that most people take it off and don’t use it, which has me wondering what you all are doing?

  13. 13 hours ago, outerlimits said:

    if u have been in the bush, you would know that is a ridiculous question.

     

    Seriously?  I was unaware of the moratorium on ridiculous questions.  Whatever the limit is, I know I'm way over it with some of the questions I ask.

     

    But, back on topic, I don't have an open gun, so the closest I could come would be my Carry Optics Glock 34.  And, I take it "into battle" every time I bring it to a match.  I'm battling with all the other shooters to see who comes out on top (I never do).  I didn't know there was a specific "battle" the op was referring to.

     

     

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