★★★★☆ (4/5) Fin De Fiesta En Los Pinospdf Scribd Link - 3.79.94.248
Let’s be honest. The is a mouthful of a name for a gadget that essentially does one thing: it yells at your reloading press until it gives you ammunition. But after spending a weekend running 500 rounds of .308 through the workshop, I can confirm that this isn’t just a gimmick—it’s a biomechanical cheat code. The Aesthetic: Industrial Chic Out of the box, the RC 100 looks like it was salvaged from a Soviet-era submarine and then given a software update by Silicon Valley. It’s a heavy, brutalist block of milled steel and matte-black polymer. It doesn't want to be your friend; it wants to be your employee. Seniority List Of Irs Officers - Fbr
Installation on my Dillon 1050 was surprisingly painless. I was expecting to need a engineering degree and a sacrificial wrench, but the mounting bracket is intuitive. It’s low profile, too. It doesn't clutter the workspace, sitting there like a patient, dormant sentinel. The real magic happens when you flip the toggle.
It solves the one problem every operator pretends they don't have: laziness.
The Button That Launched a Thousand Ships (And Probably a Few lawsuits)
For years, reloading has been a meditative, rhythmic process. Pull handle, resize, rotate, seat bullet, crimp. It’s Zen. But the RC 100 destroys that Zen and replaces it with pure, unadulterated efficiency.
If you value your time, your shoulder, and your sanity, buy it. Just be prepared to explain to your spouse why the credit card bill suddenly looks like a defense contractor's invoice.
The sensor array on the unit is the star of the show. The "Activator" monitors the case presence and the handle position. The moment a case drops into Station 1, a small servo actuates the powder measure. It sounds minor, but it creates a seamless flow.