RBHarter wrote:I'm pretty sure the only way to beat this habit involves bereavement leave for the immediate family .
While that response makes me chuckle I'm reluctant to go quite that far at this time...
RBHarter wrote:I'm pretty sure the only way to beat this habit involves bereavement leave for the immediate family .
GasGuzzler wrote:The Lee 90945 is only $238 on Amazon. I guess $200 is still 16% off. I think I'm buying that Lyman prep station thingie after all. Today is my anniversary and Father's Day is coming up. :-)
Man, Talk about "enabler"By the way the outfit that I bought this one from still has one left if anyone is interested, it says "make offer" so you could try a lower number than I did..
GasGuzzler wrote:Oooo
Send me the link. I'm buying another stripped lower but I sold a complete so maybe I can get a cheap .45 loadmaster as an excuse to speed gun money.
I think this is how many of us got a lot of our reloading gear. I know it is in my personal experience. Larry, Horseman and another friend, John, and I have been trading, swapping and "loaning" (with no return required) since we first met. Reloaders are just enablers and worse because reloaders don't let friends not reload. Heck I blame my dad for teaching this enabling behavior.horseman wrote: I just went and checked and It's gone, so see I just saved you some money.....you're welcome But......if you're not in a hurry for another one, knowing me as well as I do, you may get a chance on the one I have. Of course that will be AFTER I buy a bunch of "stuff" for it and get it just the way I want it and running real good, then I'll probably sell it. It's just the way I do things , buy something, spend more to make it "better", then sell it cheap. Pretty sure my wife will have something like that as my epitaph, right below (in great big letters) IDIOT.
My younger brother helped my Dad in getting me hooked.daboone wrote:I think this is how many of us got a lot of our reloading gear. I know it is in my personal experience. Larry, Horseman and another friend, John, and I have been trading, swapping and "loaning" (with no return required) since we first met. Reloaders are just enablers and worse because reloaders don't let friends not reload. Heck I blame my dad for teaching this enabling behavior.
You pretty much summed up my feeling concerning my addiction. Sometimes, with many firearms, I'm changing things up so much (and enjoying it), that I don't ever have a stock of ammo on hand. It seems the tinkering never ends and I'm trying to at least establish a base, go to load for everything I have.Macd wrote:Reloading for me is what keeps the brain active. Whether it is cleaning brass, researching loads, priming off the press or any of the other activities of this hobby I enjoy it all. I have a confession to make though. When I get that perfect combination for a particular load with the satisfaction comes a tinge of regret since that puzzle is finished. Happily there is an infinite number of others to solve.