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Best books for a Beginning Reloader

2.7K views 22 replies 16 participants last post by  Kevinbear  
#1 · (Edited)
Hey everyone, my nephew recently turned 18 and got his hunting license so me and his Dad are going to be taking him out to the range fairly often now. We wanted to teach him more than just what you do at the range, so we are going to all be learning how to reload bullets together. My brother and I both did a little reloading when we were younger, but it has been almost 20 years now so I assume that a lot has changed since then.

So, the three of us are looking for some books that we can read up on together to learn about reloading before we even stand in front of a bench. I am hoping that we can find some books from the past decade as well as some older books so that we can contrast the information between them. I plan on buying the books(at least one copy of each book anyways) so a library is not going to be much help other than deciding if a book might be good for us. Any books that you all can recommend for some beginners that we might be able to order online? Thanks in advance.

Edit- I had trouble finding some of the books in the shops around the house, so I went online and ended up finding a plethora of reloading books at http://www.used.forsale/reloading-books that I went and bought. Thanks again for the advice everyone, I am sure the boy will like it.
 
#2 ·
Any Lyman manual, Lee manuals are good I hear.

I particularly like older manuals as there's a lot of information in those that isn't anywhere else. The data maybe isn't current, but the "larnin" is still there. Lyman doesn't sell bullets, powder or guns so they (like Lee) don't have a dog in the race and their data is a little less skewed IMO.

RJ
 
#3 ·
I would start with a loading manual from Speer, Nosler, or Hornady. Each of those will give you loads, but, in the front of each is a step by step tutorial on how to reload - what each step does, and why.
Pick the brand of bullets you think you will use, and buy that one.
You can get loading data on line at the powder manufacturers websites, and you can get books from the library, too, but the reloading manuals are where you get the step by step instructions on how to do it.
 
#12 ·
Initially, I cut my teeth on Speer, then a little later came Hornady and then Nosler. There have been others I've bought along the way, but all said there really hasn't been much that my old Speer manual didn't provide, and with a very easy to understand layout. There have been some things regarding how one book might explain certain steps in which I felt was some what contradictory to another publisher, but over all none of them will get you into trouble as long as the student takes their time and reads the material to it's entirety. All too often I've witnessed new reloaders taking short cuts, skipping through the pages, this doesn't usually work out too well.

SMOA
 
#9 ·
Wow, such awesome replies from everyone. I will be looking to get some manuals from Sierra I think and another from Lyman. We will also be showing him the online resources mentioned and have a look ourselves to see what has changed since the old man taught us in a dark shed in winter. I will also be passing on the names of the books that we don't buy to relatives so they will know what to get the boy for graduation. Thanks everyone!
 
#6 ·
If starting out I'd consider a manual from a bullet manufacturer (Hornady or Sierra) and another from an equipment maker (Lyman or Lee). He needs to read the why and what for section before diving in. There are several dependable online sources for reloading data. Two I often use are Nosler's and Hodgdon.
For cast bullets Lyman is the gold standard.

Best wishes as you both give your knowledge and experience to the young man!
 
#10 ·
The one thing I'd add to the excellent recommendations so far is a subscription to Handloader magazine.

All of the manuals from the top bullet suppliers are very good, (although redundant), my Lyman books for shotgun, rifle, and handgun recipes are quite good, can't go wrong there. Pet loads is an essential, but not really for beginners, Lee lacks the specifics to be more than an general reference for someone starting out.

Handloader fills in the blanks, of which there are several, the down side is it's an accumulation of information that covers decades of trends and new products. My reference collection includes multiple generations of the above manuals, but my Handloader collection swamps them all in sheer volume of information.
 
#11 ·
Since no one has mentioned it, there are little handbooks with a compilation of data for one particular cartridge. It has excerpts from most of the popular reloading manuals. Only trouble is they tend to lag behind the most current edition of manuals. For about $10 bucks they are still a decent buy.
 
#16 ·
I found Lyman to be very informative, but, a bit dry. Lee's "Modern Reloading" was a much better read. If you really want to drill down and learn how things work together read Frexylls book "From Ingot to target. All three are available online as digital pdf files. For load data I use Lyman. For practical application I talk it over with my mentor. Find someone who will tell you how to pick your powder and what bullet weight is too much and has experience mixing alloy and why some bullets have more lube grooves than others. That's my opinion.
 
#17 ·
Not a big speer fan.

Only having #11, I find the listed loads well over most other manuals for the same bullet wt. The layout & info etc I have no problem with. I wouldn't advise starting with anyone's max load, especially speer. IMO it pays to look at a few (minimum) sources before deciding on a starting point, then work up with accuracy over velocity being the primary goal. If you REALLY NEED the velocity, then sacrifice "some" accuracy for speed.
 
#19 ·
I have a standard rule. DO NOT reload your handgun ammunition. That's practical advise. If you use your handgun in a self defense scenario. The last thing you need is some Plaintiff's attorney grilling you on your "desire" to kill someone.

I reload my rifle ammunition for hunting. But, when it comes to my handgun ammunition, I will only use factory.
 
#23 ·
Almost any of the bullet or powder mfg's books will do if you want replace components in your cases and shoot them, I'd go with a Hodgdon because that's the most common powders around here.
But.........if you think this kid might have some imagination pick up Ken Waters "Pet loads" followed by P.O. Ackley's reloading manuals 1 and 2, the latter are very dated but the theories are sound.