Not for me, too many things to go wrong.
I had a progressive loader for awhile until it started kicking out double charges and blew up my rifle. I trickle every load by hand on a single stage now right down to 1/10 grain. I want to see every detail. Rifles are too expensive to take chances with.Not for me, too many things to go wrong.
A buddy of mine in Washington bought his Dillon 1050 from a man that had blown up 3 handguns!I had a progressive loader for awhile until it started kicking out double charges and blew up my rifle. I trickle every load by hand on a single stage now right down to 1/10 grain. I want to see every detail. Rifles are too expensive to take chances with.

I’m interested to know more. What rifle cartridge and what was the charge that double charge fit in the case?I had a progressive loader for awhile until it started kicking out double charges and blew up my rifle. I trickle every load by hand on a single stage now right down to 1/10 grain. I want to see every detail. Rifles are too expensive to take chances with.
What you describe is why I started loading, to get away from inconsistent factory ammo.Some of the biggest complaints I have seen and heard about buying reloaded ammo is inconsistency. Many at commerical indoor shooting ranges. From squib loads to way over charged blowing primers out, split cases to bullets caught in the barrel.