I remember watching a master home builder a few decades ago and coming to realize the difference between someone that knows a thousand ways to work smarter and someone like me who could swing a hammer and usually not hit my thumb. Seems to me the masters at their craft have always come up with ways to work faster, cleaner and more efficiently.
I'd love to hear what tips/tricks you might have for reloading that you'd want to share.
The only one I've found so far is that I put a tiny sharpie mark on my seating die knob, so I can more accurately know how far I'm adjusting my die down with each iteration of seating. I also found that for a given cartridge, if I run a few of the first full turns down on the die, I can get an idea of how much deeper I seat with each revolution. So it's easier to keep from over adjusting.
I'd love to hear what tips/tricks you might have for reloading that you'd want to share.
The only one I've found so far is that I put a tiny sharpie mark on my seating die knob, so I can more accurately know how far I'm adjusting my die down with each iteration of seating. I also found that for a given cartridge, if I run a few of the first full turns down on the die, I can get an idea of how much deeper I seat with each revolution. So it's easier to keep from over adjusting.