L.E. Wilson, you won't any trimming speed records but the brass will be uniform and square.
I don't think the Wilson is a slow case trimmer at all
One disappointment I had when I first saw an L.E. Wilson case trimmer was you have to figure out a way to hold it while trimming....I bought mine back in the late 1970's.at York Arms in Memphis Tn. A short time before that I used a file and a trim die made by RCBS to trim cases or even make cases out of other cases. Anyone remember what a pain in the azz they were ?
Some of the other brands of case trimmers they had in stock at York Arms looked way cooler looking to me than the simple plain Jane looking L.E. Wilson trimmer....the EXPERT that worked in York Arms (no chit when is the last time you ran into an Expert in a Sporting goods store)....the expert assured me the L.E. Wilson trimmer was the best because it supported the entire case while trimming and the case was not supported by the rim on one end or a by a collet of some sort stuck in the neck of the case.
Trusting him I walked out the door with my L.E. Wilson case trimmer, one shell holde and an extra cutter head...i think it was all around $30 or $40 bucks maybe less....I still have the extra cutter head never felt the need to change the original. I guess if you dropped it and damaged the blades it might need replacing.
I've always just clamped the Wilson case trimmer base in a bench vice.....I have a block of wood setting close by to tap the case out of the body die.
Usually a few turns of the handle and the case is trimmed a light tap on the wood and the case is ejected and another case is put it....takes less time to trim a case than it did for me to type the last few lines....if you don't like turning the handle they sell a cutter head that will work on a drill....but then you'd loose some of the feel for the cut.
Wilson shell/case holders most all work for at least 3 or 4 different calibers and are so marked....on some cartridges you'll need two...a "new case" and a "fired case" shell holder.
Reason being...a new case will have a smaller body diameter than a fired case (even if the fired case has been full length resized). On some cartridges the case will sit in the die different enough that you'll need to have the two.
Its a small price to pay for a tool that will last a lifetime of perfection.
Anything L.E. Wilson makes or ever made is World class.....
No cheap pot metal Chinese Harbor Freight handloading tools from L.E. Wilson.
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