Author Topic: Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?  (Read 681 times)

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Offline smoky

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« on: January 02, 2004, 04:58:30 AM »
I only have limited experience with pulling my reloaded bullets.  That experience is limted to the hammer-type inertia pullers. Recently, I noticed that Forster's and RCBS make one that works with my press.  Sort of a reverse seating operation (unseating if you will).  Does anyone have any experience with either of these products?  I am getting ready to place a reloading supply order and I may want to include one of these if they are worth having.

Your comments and opinions are greatly appreciated.

Smoky
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Offline richp41

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #1 on: January 02, 2004, 06:01:46 AM »
Forster is very fast and doesn't damage the bullets. With 2 collets, I pull all 30s, 7.62s  and 8mm bullets. I think the RCBS is quite similar in operation. Rich P

Offline Norwester

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #2 on: January 02, 2004, 08:01:28 AM »
I'v got the RCBS version.Works great. With the 30 cal collet I'v pulled everything down to and including .243 cal bullets.

Offline Graybeard

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #3 on: January 02, 2004, 10:48:10 AM »
Get the Hornady. Best of them. Love it. See my review of it at this URL:

http://www.graybeardoutdoors.com/product_test/review-20.shtml

Nothing is faster or better. Promise.

GB


Bill aka the Graybeard
President, Graybeard Outdoor Enterprises
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I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life anyone who believes in Him will have everlasting life!

Offline The Pistoleer

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #4 on: January 02, 2004, 12:41:32 PM »
A tip for using the hammer type.  Forget the collets that come with them.  Just use the shell holder for the caliber.  I have chipped them on occasion but they are relativly cheap.

Pete
Pete

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Offline Bullseye

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #5 on: January 02, 2004, 05:48:05 PM »
From my experience, I will take the type that goes in the press anytime, no matter what brand.

Offline longwinters

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #6 on: January 02, 2004, 07:14:24 PM »
I took GB's advice from a previous post and am extremely happy w/ my Hornady camlok puller.  Bought one with the set up for 7mm and it works well from 243 - 30 cal.  This was also due to GB's advice and experience.

long
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Offline Ross

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #7 on: January 04, 2004, 04:44:01 PM »
Flush seated wadcutters and some ogives are ingraspable,   (He he, I love that word.) and will require an inertia puller.
Extremely light bullets are hard to extract with an inertia puller.  I use both.  The hammer gets used at the range pretty often.  One lives in the car.  It works for sight drifting too.
Cheers from Darkest California,
Ross

Offline thecowboyace

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #8 on: January 19, 2004, 10:54:38 AM »
What are you speaking of in "sight drifting"?  Are you using it for tapping the sights with it?

Offline Ross

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #9 on: January 19, 2004, 12:59:30 PM »
Ace,
Yes, I use it to drift dovetail sights, often with a defective cartridge case or a penny for a drift, and to seat primers in a Lee Loader, and to hammer in tacks on hard wood at the target butts, and to pull bulets.  It works well on walnuts too.
It is always there and so gets used a lot, just like the beehive tool.
Cheers fron Darkest California,
Ross

Offline thecowboyace

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Bullet Puller? Which One to Buy?
« Reply #10 on: January 19, 2004, 01:54:05 PM »
I know that.  I have an old Case knive that has been used to cut wire, SHAME ON ME but have the notches out, pencil sharpener, castration, trimming caulk, tapping nails in the bottom of boots, leather punch, nut turner, screwdriver, fingernail cleaner, letter opener, pecan cracker, peeler, clean-out, and I can do the dangest, quickest, slip-slide cuts on an orange and have it peeled in just ........done.  We had them 29 tools in a knive that only had two blade on it, a drop tang and a ....   <....... , don't know what that one is called though.

Speaking of pencil sharpeners, as a youngster, I wrote real small and I can remember Dad taking a few pencils and sharpening them up and putting the finest point on them that few pencil sharpeners could do.  Heck 0.5mm, not nothing to a . (dot) sized lead.

Orange peeling - Also as a youngster, we never got much fruit growing up until things got better, bout the time I turned 14 or so, but early on at Christmas the schools and the churches gave out fruit and candy socks and that way kids didn't have to buy any Christmas presents for anyone.  But ORANGES again, I can remember taking an orange to Dad and asking if he would peel it for me, he'd come back with 'Lets just cut it in half and then you can squeeze the juice out in your mouth and then peel the peeling back and eat the meat of it?' all knowing good and well what he was going to do.  He could take that orange and it was like magic, it would spin in his hand with the knife, never cutting into the meat or even past the white, would cut into the white but not ever, in my memory anyways, into the orange and then holding the knife he would twirl it some more and then there was the  orange all peeled and knive slits where one could just push the seeds out of the oranges and never get them in our mouths.

The simple things that a mother or a father could do that would make the eyes sparkle like diamonds in a young child's face.  Those things were worth more than any diamond, gold, frankencinse or myrhh.

crap, tearing up thinking of the good days of simple things..