Ch Reloading Presses Manually
Someone gave me a CH Auto-Champion Progressive Press. A bit dirty but seems to. It doesn't quite have the leverage to resize bottleneck rifle cartridges though.it's geared mainly towards pistol reloading. I was going to. I have an owner's manual if you need to know anything about the press.
Think IN the BattleBox UPDATED 22 July 2010 Strategic Capabilities: ISO Container 'BattleBoxes TM': Containerize the entire U.S. Army www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qdHqBKbaAI Slide 6a of 48 'The ultimate objective of an army is to impose its collective will on the enemy. But its first mission is simply to exist. Its first problem is to feed and clothe and shelter itself, and to be able to move itself from one place to another.
Most people think of an army as expending its energy in fighting the enemy. Actually, most of an army's energy goes into keeping itself alive and in being; and in getting itself to where a very small portion of its numbers can fight an equally small portion of the enemy's total army. As soon as we won in Tunisia, we had no place for our army to fight the Reichswehr. But even when Rommel's armies were still terrible, a surprisingly small portion of the Allied 'armed forces' in Africa was engaged in fighting it.
Ch Reloading Press Manual
Different Types Of Reloading Presses
And of those who are entitled to battle stars on their ribbons, only a small fraction were killing in the literal sense. And even the killers spent most of their time -I would guess an average of twenty-two hours out of twenty-four- in house-keeping for themselves, and in moving from one place to another. Yet the whole effect of the army is as integrated as the 'shaft and the head and the point of the tip of a spear.' A human being is such a frail thing that he cannot live more than a few days without both food and sleep. Nature is still his real enemy even though he takes his eternal struggle with her for granted. So the army as a whole must survive against nature before it can harm a single enemy by surviving and moving itself from one place to another is ninety per cent of the army's business, and unless it does this well it is not an army.
The army solves its problems of surviving by two dull words: organization and standardization -and an enormous personal effort and submergence of the individual will to the collective welfare.' - Captain Ralph Ingersoll, The Battle is the Pay-Off; 1943; pp. 84-85 Regarding operations of U.S. Army Rangers and the 1 st Infantry Division near El Quettar, Tunisia in early 1943.