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7/26/2012 4:05:14 AM EDT
I am just getting into reloading and have read all the books I can find and a lot of the topics in this forum. My question is I have an opportunity to buy a RCBS Rock Chucker Master Kit for around $200 all new (friend of mine.) This is considerable savings but I don't know much about RCBS quality. Is it good to go?

Right now I am only reloading .223 for plinking and shooting barnyard varmints but might move on to .270 or 7mm mag for my hunting rifles.

The next question (assuming I buy this kit) is how is the quality of the RCBS .223 dies? Should I look at another brand or are the RCBS dies good to go.

I don't want to buy this kit just because it's cheap, I am more of a buy once cry once spender.



7/26/2012 4:12:19 AM EDT
[#1]
RCBS makes very good presses and dies. So buy with confidence!
7/26/2012 4:17:02 AM EDT
[#2]
Of course this is what my friend said but I have learned to get second opinions before spending money.
Thanks

7/26/2012 4:24:37 AM EDT
[#3]
RCBS is gtg
7/26/2012 4:32:44 AM EDT
[#4]
Placekeeper
7/26/2012 4:40:01 AM EDT
[#5]
You can't go wrong with a Rock Chucker. Buy it !!!
It can handle big bottlenecks that would break most other presses.

Is your friend throwing in the RCBS dies too ? They are good dies but very expensive. Lee dies will do the same thing at half the cost.
7/26/2012 5:45:42 AM EDT
[#6]
Thats exactly how I got mine.
I use RCBS pretty exclusively. Loaded 10's of thousands of rounds on it.

200 smackeroos to get the full kit (new) is a steal.
7/26/2012 6:20:05 AM EDT
[#7]
Buy it!
7/26/2012 7:25:58 AM EDT
[#8]
definitely a steal.
7/26/2012 8:40:23 AM EDT
[#9]
Quoted:
I am just getting into reloading and have read all the books I can find and a lot of the topics in this forum. My question is I have an opportunity to buy a RCBS Rock Chucker Master Kit for around $200 all new (friend of mine.) This is considerable savings but I don't know much about RCBS quality. Is it good to go?

Right now I am only reloading .223 for plinking and shooting barnyard varmints but might move on to .270 or 7mm mag for my hunting rifles.

The next question (assuming I buy this kit) is how is the quality of the RCBS .223 dies? Should I look at another brand or are the RCBS dies good to go.

I don't want to buy this kit just because it's cheap, I am more of a buy once cry once spender.




Buy the kit, that's a deal.  You'll need to buy additional tools in order to load, but that is a great start.  The dies are probably okay, but I would inspect the inside of the sizer, looking for obvious machining marks, especially if the date code on the top of the die is after about 1982.  Even if the die is bad, RCBS will make it right.

7/26/2012 8:42:29 AM EDT
[#10]
Anything that breaks will be replaced by RCBS.

Buy it, it's definitely a buy once item.

Mine still plugs away for me after 7 or 8 years.

TXL
7/26/2012 8:52:12 AM EDT
[#11]
My first press was a rock chucker. I eventually added a piggyback. I now have presses of almost every brand through finding good deals over the years. I still love my RCBS.
7/26/2012 11:11:54 AM EDT
[#12]
The Rock Chucker is the gold standard for single stage presses.
7/26/2012 11:33:50 AM EDT
[#13]




A Rockchucker is my single stage press.



Quality is not an issue with this press.



Close that deal that was offered to you.
7/26/2012 2:59:28 PM EDT
[#14]
Quoted:
http://i250.photobucket.com/albums/gg272/dryflash3/Rockchucker/P2250793.jpg

A Rockchucker is my single stage press.

Quality is not an issue with this press.

Close that deal that was offered to you.


Just curious. Why is there live primers in your catch tray?

To the OP. My first kit was the RockChucker II master reloading kit. If it was called that back then. It hasn't missed a beat since I got it back in the late 1980's. It has seen a LOT of action too. I've used well over 100 pounds of powder so far. All loaded on that one press.

7/26/2012 7:57:03 PM EDT
[#15]
Quoted:
Quoted:
http://i250.photobucket.com/albums/gg272/dryflash3/Rockchucker/P2250793.jpg

A Rockchucker is my single stage press.

Quality is not an issue with this press.

Close that deal that was offered to you.


Just curious. Why is there live primers in your catch tray?

To the OP. My first kit was the RockChucker II master reloading kit. If it was called that back then. It hasn't missed a beat since I got it back in the late 1980's. It has seen a LOT of action too. I've used well over 100 pounds of powder so far. All loaded on that one press.



Looks like he's priming, the top basket has primed brass and the bottom one has unprimed brass... just my guess

7/26/2012 8:21:39 PM EDT
[#16]



Quoted:



Quoted:

http://i250.photobucket.com/albums/gg272/dryflash3/Rockchucker/P2250793.jpg



A Rockchucker is my single stage press.



Quality is not an issue with this press.



Close that deal that was offered to you.




Just curious. Why is there live primers in your catch tray?



To the OP. My first kit was the RockChucker II master reloading kit. If it was called that back then. It hasn't missed a beat since I got it back in the late 1980's. It has seen a LOT of action too. I've used well over 100 pounds of powder so far. All loaded on that one press.





Had a batch that I was pulling down, yes live primers.


 



I just go slow with light pressure on the press handle and deprime.

(I know you know this, mentioned this for the new reloaders who may be seeing this.)
7/27/2012 7:29:37 AM EDT
[#17]
Buy, buy , buy!
7/27/2012 7:34:13 AM EDT
[#18]
Midway has the RCBS Rockchucker supreme kit on sale now for $289 plus handling shipping etc.  So the $200 sounds good to go.  As long as you stay in the reloading business, you will never obsolete that RCBS singlestage.
7/27/2012 1:19:17 PM EDT
[#19]
Quoted:

Quoted:
Quoted:
http://i250.photobucket.com/albums/gg272/dryflash3/Rockchucker/P2250793.jpg

A Rockchucker is my single stage press.

Quality is not an issue with this press.

Close that deal that was offered to you.


Just curious. Why is there live primers in your catch tray?

To the OP. My first kit was the RockChucker II master reloading kit. If it was called that back then. It hasn't missed a beat since I got it back in the late 1980's. It has seen a LOT of action too. I've used well over 100 pounds of powder so far. All loaded on that one press.


Had a batch that I was pulling down, yes live primers.
 

I just go slow with light pressure on the press handle and deprime.
(I know you know this, mentioned this for the new reloaders who may be seeing this.)


Oh OK. I didn't think you were priming. You would have had the primers in the feed tube. I custom fit my feed tubes to Lee primer trays. My Lee Auto Prime was not up to priming GI 06's. That was a long time ago.

7/27/2012 6:21:11 PM EDT
[#20]
Rcbs is good to go. Just make sure the kit is complete. There are friends that give you a good deal because they bought it and didnt use it, and there are friends that will milk your money for a complete kit that wasnt complete, it was missing $89 worth of parts..
7/27/2012 6:41:59 PM EDT
[#21]
my RCBS RCII Master Reloading kit from 1991 is still going strong!
7/28/2012 12:32:38 AM EDT
[#22]
Quoted:
Thats exactly how I got mine.
I use RCBS pretty exclusively. Loaded 10's of thousands of rounds on it.

200 smackeroos to get the full kit (new) is a steal.


Yeah it is. I thought I got a sweet deal on mine for $280 shipped (brand new) off eBay
7/30/2012 6:11:42 AM EDT
[#23]
Thanks for all of your help. Picked up the kit and it is very much brand new. My next big purchase needs to be a tumbler or cleaner of some sort. A tumbler seems like a proven cleaning method but for a few more dollars I can get a hornady ultrasonic cleaner. I know that the ultrasonic cleaner will not polish the brass but is it better than tumbling? One of my reloading friends wishes he would have bought an ultrasonic cleaner instead of his tumbler. What is the arfcom opinion?
7/30/2012 6:27:13 AM EDT
[#24]
My dad uses the Hornady Ultrasonic and loves it.  The brass comes out looking like new.  I use my Dillon tumbler with lizard litter and Nu Polish and get a really close to new looking finish.  YMMV
7/30/2012 8:53:04 AM EDT
[#25]
dcrocky81

I'm still using the Rockchucker press I bought in 1973 after getting out of the service and its still going strong.

Someone in another forum stated he attached a torque wrench set at 12 inch pounds  to his Rockchucker press to get uniform neck tension with his Lee Collet dies.

I took this photo and told the OP I attached my torque wrench to my Rockchucker but I cant get the handle doohickey to click, what should I do.

7/30/2012 9:47:47 AM EDT
[#26]
I have a tumbler and an ultrasonic cleaner that I picked up from Harbor Freight.  The ultrasonic cleaner I got is the exact same model as the Lyman, just rebranded and cheaper.  
7/30/2012 10:04:36 AM EDT
[#27]
Quoted:
I have a tumbler and an ultrasonic cleaner that I picked up from Harbor Freight.  The ultrasonic cleaner I got is the exact same model as the Lyman, just rebranded and cheaper.  


Do you like one more than the other? Notice any considerable difference?
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