I kid. I'm not in the manufacturing business. But I do think it would be useful.
Why don't they make the resizing/decapping die with a small step at the max OAL for the cartridge it's made for? It'd leave enough of a mark that you would know if it needed trimming and where to trim the thing to without having to measure every one of them.
TTL is the slowest and most boring part of reloading, IMO, and I think that'd speed it up a bunch. Just grab 'em and trim to the end of the mark.

Exact size of the step would take some experimenting. I'm thinking about .010" or a bit less would be all sorts of enough.
Note that I realize that wouldn't work for pistol cartridge dies that one uses for multiple variations on the same diameter (.38/.357, for instance.) But most of my dies are specific to one particular round, and it would be useful there.
Dear reloading manufacturers. If you like the idea, and it would work, please steal it. As noted, I ain't in that kind of business.
Why don't they make the resizing/decapping die with a small step at the max OAL for the cartridge it's made for? It'd leave enough of a mark that you would know if it needed trimming and where to trim the thing to without having to measure every one of them.
TTL is the slowest and most boring part of reloading, IMO, and I think that'd speed it up a bunch. Just grab 'em and trim to the end of the mark.

Exact size of the step would take some experimenting. I'm thinking about .010" or a bit less would be all sorts of enough.
Note that I realize that wouldn't work for pistol cartridge dies that one uses for multiple variations on the same diameter (.38/.357, for instance.) But most of my dies are specific to one particular round, and it would be useful there.

Dear reloading manufacturers. If you like the idea, and it would work, please steal it. As noted, I ain't in that kind of business.
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