Negative- load thousands of rounds of 223, 308, and 300 blk on the 550 and 650. If you don't want to deal with the swaging, buy the already prepped brass from brassbomber.com. I buy from them and do range pick up's. I do all my stuff in big stages and that way I always have bulks ready to reload. I wet tumble after resizing, after they are dry I will trim with the little crow trimmer. You can trim a ton very quickly. After trimming, I will sit down at the rcbs prep center and swage the crimp, debur and chamfer. Tried using the Dillon super swage, but I can move along pretty quickly on the prep center.
After that and case gauge check, they are ready to go into the bins and ready to be loaded.
I've gotten in the habit to not resize while loading at the same time. I have many tool heads for both machines, I use the 650 to do all the resizing. Throw the 308 tool head on that only has the sizing die, and knock out a few thousand, move those along to the next stage. Throw the 223 sizing tool head on and rip through 4 thousand rounds. Its mindless, but put the tunes on and before you know it, your moving on to the next stage.
I cut 1000 brass at a time for the 300 blk, and same thing. Do big batches.
I have big plastic bins for each stage, so it's very easy to keep track of the rifle rounds.
Just what I do
:-)
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