Welcome to the forum and thanks for asking our advice
zachkuby87 said:
Thanks I intend to sign up for classes when my permit to purchase goes through and I go to pick up my sigma. And I have a question that I forgot to ask what does it mean when someone says they shoot reload. Is it used ammo that is reloaded? If so how is this done? By hand or are there machines you can buy or what? From what I've seen guys talking about reload ammo is the way to go when trying to save money I would deffinately be interested in saving some cash...
When I bought my first gun (Dan Wesson .357 magnum revolver), I also bought a reloading press. It cut my cost of ammunition to 1/4 the cost of retail ammunition. Of course, the conventional wisdom is that no one saves money by reloading. They just are able to shoot four times as much. Some find reloading a satisfying pastime in itself, as well. I find it as much satisfaction filling my cases as emptying them.
The brass casings (sometimes nickle plated) are re-usable as long as they are in good condition. Aluminum cases and steel cases are not re-usable.
Take an empty case, knock the primer out of it, press a new primer into the pocket, charge with gunpowder and press a new bullet in the case mouth and you have a reloaded cartridge. I have left out a lot of (and some of them VERY important) detail, but the process, conceptually, is just that simple.
Lee Precision makes a $17 kit that will allow you to reload, using a mallet to drive the process, but it is painfully slow.
Lee, Hornady, RCBS, Lyman and a host of other manufacturers make a variety of presses and accessories for reloading ammunition, all capable of supremely accurate, safe and reliable ammunition if the operator does his/her part.
"The ABC's of Reloading" is an excellent place to start. Less than $20 from Amazon.com. You may be able to find a copy in your local Library. Most loading manuals have their first half dedicated to a description of the handloading (reloading) process. The second half dedicated to load data (recipes for the various chamberings/calibers with minimum and maximum powder charges for the various weights and types of bullets. Some have a third half dedicated to bullet flight ballistics (exterior ballistics) of interest more to long-range shooters than most pistoleers. Borrow several, if you can, and read the early chapters. Each author and editor have differing writing styles and some may resonate with your mind better than others.
There is thread permanently "stuck" to the top of the "Handloading, Reloading and Bullet Casting" forum in The Firing Line. (Commonly referred to as a "sticky")
Here is a link:
http://thefiringline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=230171
and if the link does not work paste this into your browser:
thefiringline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=230171
or just "mouse" over to the forum. It isn't hard to find.
Good luck, good shooting, always wear eye protection (especially when working with primers) and don't pinch your fingers in your press.
Lost Sheep