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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Reloading
Reloading class
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<blockquote data-quote="Gav-n-Tn" data-source="post: 5848529" data-attributes="member: 24360"><p>I'd definitely start with a single stage and as many manual tools as possible. Any manufacturer will do (I like bits and pieces from all of them) and, I'd use budget line equipment. If they drop out, at least they don't go broke getting started. Probably a bad analogy but, kinda like teaching someone to shoot and starting with a single shot bolt action. Starting out with the aforementioned setup slows the pace and forces every single stage to be thought about and hands on. I think a bottle neck rifle cartridge is a good place to start. Safety, fundamentals, safety, fundamentals, etc etc and fancy equipment can come later. Start out with a 3 on the tree and then graduate to an automatic with cruise control and power windows if you learn to drive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Gav-n-Tn, post: 5848529, member: 24360"] I’d definitely start with a single stage and as many manual tools as possible. Any manufacturer will do (I like bits and pieces from all of them) and, I’d use budget line equipment. If they drop out, at least they don’t go broke getting started. Probably a bad analogy but, kinda like teaching someone to shoot and starting with a single shot bolt action. Starting out with the aforementioned setup slows the pace and forces every single stage to be thought about and hands on. I think a bottle neck rifle cartridge is a good place to start. Safety, fundamentals, safety, fundamentals, etc etc and fancy equipment can come later. Start out with a 3 on the tree and then graduate to an automatic with cruise control and power windows if you learn to drive. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Gun Owners Forums
Reloading
Reloading class
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