Pics of your reloading area
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Sure!
I'm thinking maybe a little MSNBC or CNN? Come on now, the truth shall set you free!
I'm thinking maybe a little MSNBC or CNN? Come on now, the truth shall set you free!
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
I'm jealous; you have a Coke machine in your reloading room. I'd love to have one of the old machines.PBratton wrote:Just getting things set up, but here's what I've got:
Chas.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Yup, I was getting around to some pegboard I think...bpet wrote:PBratton wrote:Just getting things set up, but here's what I've got:
Plenty of room, plenty of sturdy! Looks like a ton of potential.
Shelves over the bench would make a nice place for some lighting and as things heat up this summer, you've got cold cokes handy!
And the coke machine? Yea, just never have a quarter when you need it.
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Active Military, Veterans, Law Enforcement, Fire, EMS receive $15 transfers.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
I guess I am the poor boy out of the bunch. I have a 6X8 room in the garage.
One side
The corner where the work goes on.
Other side is storage & the work bench for cleaning, sorting brass, & what ever
One side
The corner where the work goes on.
Other side is storage & the work bench for cleaning, sorting brass, & what ever
Carry 24-7 or guess right.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Mine is way too messy to publish... plus it does triple duty for everyday workbench duties and is the 'clean' half of my knife making area.
No damage control is ever as good as prevention.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
I recently bought all my equipment, but I haven't set any of it up yet. But lacking a specific place to do it for now, I bought one of these from Midway:
Its a Frankford Arsenal Portable Reloading Stand
Its a Frankford Arsenal Portable Reloading Stand
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
That is actually quite sufficient. We had one of these threads a couple of yrs ago & one of the BEST reloaders on the board uses a stand about like that but he made his yrs ago. Sits on cution bucket from Cabellas best I remember. Single stage RCBS.
Carry 24-7 or guess right.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
LT, if you mean Marty, Crossfire's husband, he's the one who suggested it to me because he uses one himself.longtooth wrote:That is actually quite sufficient. We had one of these threads a couple of yrs ago & one of the BEST reloaders on the board uses a stand about like that but he made his yrs ago. Sits on cution bucket from Cabellas best I remember. Single stage RCBS.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Oooh, I like!gmckinl wrote:This is the reloading bench/cabinet I built several years ago. It works very well. While somewhat plain in styling, it is at least not ugly. I always meant to top it off with some crown molding or some kind of hardwood trim, but I just never got around to it.
This is the exterior, doors closed
This is the interior, both upper section and lower section lights are switched on
Upper section
Lower section
Lower section, details of leg/surface support
Upper section, details, storage shelf support
IIRC, some of the construction details.
• Built from 3 sheets of ¾ in particle board. This allowed me to put in all the screw holes I wanted without concern as they were easily covered during finishing
• Used 3 or 4 2x4 for the framing. The legs are doubled, glued, and screwed, one is 3.5 in shorter to form a rabbit to support the work surface frame, wood-on-wood
• Work surface is laminated from ¾ and ½ marine plywood (very hard wood) as it is something I had on hand. It’s covered in a maple finish Formica.
• About 3 pounds of screws were used in the construction. I wanted everything heavily glued and screwed into place.
• Double wheeled locking casters allow it to be moved, but it still isn’t easy as it weighs several hundred pounds
• Outlet strip provides power to external open section for a TV, there is also an antenna jack wall plate up there to allow connection to antenna/cable.
• Interior finish is epoxy paint
• Exterior finish is Formica in… wait a minute… wait for it… Winchester Walnut
• Upper section shelves are adjustable via brackets
• Lower section shelves are fixed.
Hope this gives you another idea.
Apartment life has made me reluctant to set up a reloading bench.
But now that I've gotten into competitive pistol shooting, I really need to reload to cut down on ammo costs.
I need something compact, unobtrusive, and not too terribly difficult to move to another apartment.
A cabinet like yours, which closes up and serves other purposes, like for the TV on top is just the sort of idea I've been looking for. My apartment has a small second bedroom that I use for a computer room and music room. I've got a TV table thingy that could be replaced with a cabinet like that. Thanks for the inspiration.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
He is the one. Great guy & if you need loading help he is the best I know. Man I wish he would post some on here. He is great to visit w/.The Annoyed Man wrote:LT, if you mean Marty, Crossfire's husband, he's the one who suggested it to me because he uses one himself.longtooth wrote:That is actually quite sufficient. We had one of these threads a couple of yrs ago & one of the BEST reloaders on the board uses a stand about like that but he made his yrs ago. Sits on cution bucket from Cabellas best I remember. Single stage RCBS.
Carry 24-7 or guess right.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Here's a pic of mine in the corner of the shop.
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Re: Pics of your reloading area
Well, just got my reloading rig set up tonight. It's in a little corner of what I call "the cat room", which houses the cat box and cat tree and serves as an office and storage area as well. I got a Lee 50th Anniversary Kit, which has the Breech Lock Challenger single-stage press, along with most of the other necessary stuff for reloading.
I've got a wedding coming up, so I'm not allowed to spend any significant money on a bench. My future Father-in-Law got me a table out of a Chick-Fil-A that was getting rid of them. The table is 22"x24". To sturdy it up, have a couple of 18" 2x4 boards screwed together (one flat against the wall, the other flat under the tabletop, on top of the first one) and screwed to a stud in the wall, with the table is bolted to the top board. It's quite sturdy and immovable this way. I mounted a couple of shelves on the wall to hold my brass jars, components, and other reloading stuff. Do I win the prize for tiniest reloading setup?
I got right to work and decapped/sized/primed 100 cases tonight. I hope to have my first batch of loaded ammo by the end of the weekend. Here's the photo:
I've got a wedding coming up, so I'm not allowed to spend any significant money on a bench. My future Father-in-Law got me a table out of a Chick-Fil-A that was getting rid of them. The table is 22"x24". To sturdy it up, have a couple of 18" 2x4 boards screwed together (one flat against the wall, the other flat under the tabletop, on top of the first one) and screwed to a stud in the wall, with the table is bolted to the top board. It's quite sturdy and immovable this way. I mounted a couple of shelves on the wall to hold my brass jars, components, and other reloading stuff. Do I win the prize for tiniest reloading setup?
I got right to work and decapped/sized/primed 100 cases tonight. I hope to have my first batch of loaded ammo by the end of the weekend. Here's the photo: