Alright!! Enough of this break-even talk!! It's so dependant on ammo prices, component prices, and capital outlay for the equipment that you'd have to be a CPA to actually figure it out properly. And more importantly, does anyone REALLY want this little Goblin in the back of their mind whispering " are you actually saving money, are you actually saving money..." while you're reloading?? Nothing like taking a nice, relaxing hobby and adding an Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder to it to lessen the enjoyment of the hobby itself. This is like a fisherman trying to figure out if he's saving money with all his tackle and stuff over buying fish at Cub or Wally World!! Now is that a crock, or what??
I've NEVER kept track of the money I spent for reloading stuff, and pretty much assumed that I wasn't breaking even, but I was:
1. Able to load stuff like 10mm to its original smokin hot spec rather than shooting watered down factory crap.
2. Able to load more accurate ammo for my rifles.
3. Able to load better shooting loads for my DE 50 that were same FPS but more fun to shoot.
4. Able to get into weird stuff like 45 Super, 440 Corbon, 41AE, where there was little or NO factory ammo available.
The list goes on, and includes these days the ability to load ammo during ammo famines, and the ability to load even if Obama shuts down commercial ammo availability in his next term...
Oddly enough, soaring ammo prices have actually gotten to the point that you can actually MAKE money with calibers like 500 and 460 Smith, and some of the big new magum rifle calibers. I never though I would see that day come, but its here..
Oh, and funny story from Gunstop about this guy who really DID NOT want to know how much he was spending, and he would get all this stuff, and John-Boy would add it up, and then this guy would hand John-Boy a signed check and John-Boy would fill in the amount. He never wanted to hear the total, or see the receipts. One day I was there and John-Boy did mention the total, and the guy got just a little honked off and said "Well, you didn't have to say THAT..."
This exercise is PARTICULARLY futile for people getting into handloading, as they don't really know what press suits their needs, and also don't know about all the extras they are going to buy.