You can save money by reloading? Since when?
? :-D :grin:
:-D
I can't tell in 20 or so years of it that I have ever saved a dime. I do get to shoot more for the same money, true. But I also have to get more goodies like bullet molds, bullet sizing dies, case resizing dies, more scopes mounts, a chronograph (I shot my most recent example), boxes of bullets I'll never use, The Best Whatever Tool ever made that seems made only to get your money. Actually kinda rare in the reloading industry, most of what I've ever bought did what the advertisement said it would do, finding out if I really wanted that or not is a different story. Do I save money? Only to the extent that it is snowing outside and I hate shooting in the snow. :grin:
:-D :grin: :-D (In case you didn't notice, I live in Alabama, we don't get a lot of snow)
The single most important thing I have gained from reloading is shooting experience. I pop caps at a rate of 10:1 perhaps even as much as 30:1 of most hunters I meet. I can make that 1000"s:1 for some hunters I know. Most hunters can't tell you what 100 yards looks like. I can generally call yardage to 150 yards and be right to within 10. I don't know how my rifle shoots with one load, I know how it shoots with 5 or 6. I can pick up one of 4 rifles and tell you what I was shooting in it last, what it has liked so far and what I'm trying next in it.
Have I saved money reloading? Not one red cent. But I am by far one of the most educated shooters in the woods on opening day, and I can tell you more about the load I am using than most can tell you about their rifle, for that matter any single peice of equipment they may be using that season.
Reload, you'll get more out of it. Save?
I don't know any reloaders who do this to save money, that is the excuse we give to those who want to know whats in our wallet.