Dan H
Don't be concerned of making a big shiny arse of yourself when starting to make bullets. Ask your questions get your answers and turn off Benchrest Central when you are applying what you learn. To me bulllet making is a private experience. Nothing else matters when you are leaning your new craft of making BR benchrest bullets. Share your experiences from time time, be humble with your Range buds. You are on the path of making bullets better than your guys can buy from the commercial bullet makers. Sierra, Nosler, Speer know that, they all have benchrest roots.
So Dan you should be cleaning your presses and bullet making dies, organizing your bullet making area, buying all the small stuff I and others told earlier, securing J4 jackets and lead wire, if you are going to squirt cores,learn to measure in 1/10,000's. Talk 1/10's when talking with bullet makers. Read everything you can get your hands on about bullet making. Look for and read the 'Articles' and 'FAQ's' sections in Benchrest Central. There are several well written articles on making bullets there, by some of the best bullet makers.
Dan, be aggresive and patient with your learning curve while improving your bullet making skills. Find a Mentor that will consider you one of his bullet making family. Do not under any circumstances call your Mentor everyday with questions you can figure out by reading or experimenting. Nothing wrong with comparing notes with Mentor every month. Beides your Mentor would probably like to know if you fell off the planet and sold your bullet making stuff all in the same week.
Dan set your dies to make a good bullet tip for short range BR, look at some BR bullets you might have of others as a guideline. Weigh your bullets compare them to BR bullets you bought from others for consistency. Secure a .0001 reading mike and calipers if you can afford them measure your supply of BR bullets you have from others measure your own as you make them, notice the consistency and quality of other bullet makers, where do your's fit in compared to others. Do your tech inspection on someone elses bullet quality, keep it to yourself. Strive to match or exceed what you shoot now in BR bullets, you can do it. Keep a ledger of what you do date, time, and changes. Settle on a bullet making process that works for you. Evaluate yourself often on your bullet making learning curve. One important item in making bullets, have some fun in making bullets. You will become a better shooter for all your knowledge and deidcation while making a better BR benchrest bullet. Thank your Mentor often.
Done.
Stephen Perry
Angeles BR