Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
Armory Sponsor
12/20/2015 2:26:01 PM EDT
Currently the longest operation in reloading for me is case prep.
I'm using the lee cutter and lock stud to trim my brass.
I'm looking to upgrade and am wanting to speed things up a bit.
I'm really looking for a happy mix of speed and consistence.
The Lee is the only trimmer I've ever used and that set up has served me well.
I'm see the automatic case prep centers as well as lathe type trimmers.
Can anyone offer advise on how to speed up my trimming without sacrificing the quality?
12/20/2015 5:13:27 PM EDT
[#1]
Giraud...spend the money if u want to speed things up

If not you will have to suck it up
12/20/2015 5:19:40 PM EDT
[#2]
The Giraud Tri-Way is what you seek.  Around $100. check caliber list

It's a real time saver.  It trims, chamfers, and debur's at the same time.

Get one!   I chuck mine in a high speed electric drill and couldn't be happier.

Or, if you want the powered unit and aren't on a budget, Giraud Trimmer with power ... around $500

The blades/cut are the same in both.
12/20/2015 7:10:18 PM EDT
[#3]
If you have a progress press and a casefeeder (you likely don't), then add a Dillon trimmer to your case prep cycle and you just dump in the brass and crank the handle. You decap, resize and trim all without ever touching your brass.  And, with something like a Dillon 650 or LnL, you could process 1,000rds of .223/5.56 per hour, all without touching a single case.
12/20/2015 8:37:43 PM EDT
[#4]
Make your case prep easier?  Throw that stud away, almost anything is better. And throw that Lee debur tool away too. Even if you aren't using it.

And this is coming from one of the most frugal guys on here.
12/20/2015 8:54:53 PM EDT
[#5]

Quote History
Quoted:


If you have a progress press and a casefeeder (you likely don't), then add a Dillon trimmer to your case prep cycle and you just dump in the brass and crank the handle. You decap, resize and trim all without ever touching your brass.  And, with something like a Dillon 650 or LnL, you could process 1,000rds of .223/5.56 per hour, all without touching a single case.
View Quote




 
This is the easiest method of brass prep.




I have a Hornady LNL with a Dillon 1200 trimmer and it turned the chore of case prep into a breeze.  The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.




And, I use this same method to prep the brass I use to shoot .223 out to 800 yards.






12/20/2015 11:10:28 PM EDT
[#6]
Buy pre-processed brass.  There are a couple of companies that will sell pre-processed or process yours for you.  It costs about $0.10 per case.  They clean, decap, swage the primer cup, deburr the flash hole, resize, and trim/deburr for a few pennies a case. Thereafter the cost goes down as they are cleaning, resizing and trimming/deburr.
12/21/2015 1:55:31 AM EDT
[#7]
In my brief description above, I forgot to mention that you can also get your brass annealed as part of the processing.
12/21/2015 12:32:26 PM EDT
[#8]
I use the CTS trimmers for .223 and .308.
They work good and produce consistent results.
What calibers are you trimming for?
12/21/2015 3:33:16 PM EDT
[#9]




Quote History
Quoted:
This is the easiest method of brass prep.
I have a Hornady LNL with a Dillon 1200 trimmer and it turned the chore of case prep into a breeze.  The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.
And, I use this same method to prep the brass I use to shoot .223 out to 800 yards.






 
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:




If you have a progress press and a casefeeder (you likely don't), then add a Dillon trimmer to your case prep cycle and you just dump in the brass and crank the handle. You decap, resize and trim all without ever touching your brass.  And, with something like a Dillon 650 or LnL, you could process 1,000rds of .223/5.56 per hour, all without touching a single case.
This is the easiest method of brass prep.
I have a Hornady LNL with a Dillon 1200 trimmer and it turned the chore of case prep into a breeze.  The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.
And, I use this same method to prep the brass I use to shoot .223 out to 800 yards.






 





Careful with those statements!  The Brass Nazis will come after you for speaking heresy.  The self anointed preach that to fail to debur and chamfer is blasphemy!  





(Yes, you are correct, you don't need to debur or in many cases chamfer the brass, even for your long range loads.  While I don't go out to 800yds, my 68grn 5.56 level AR loads do well as my 400-500yds apple exploder rds and all they get is trimmed and then tumbled for 15 minutes to remove the lube.  No debur or chamfer, however, I have been repeatedly chastised for evil deeds I espouse.)





 
 
 
12/21/2015 3:39:15 PM EDT
[#10]
Those of you using the Dillon trimmer are you following up with an M Die?
12/21/2015 4:09:03 PM EDT
[#11]
Nope.
12/21/2015 6:28:31 PM EDT
[#12]
The Giraud looks like the best way to do some volume but I'm loading for .223,300 aac, 243, 7mm mag, 308, 30-06, 270, 8mm Mauser,303 British , 6.5x 55 Swede, 45-70, 357 mag/38, 44mag and a few other that I may have forgotten.
I may just cherry pick a few like the 308 and 30-06 that do multiples.
Is there a lathe type that anyone recommends? RCBS,Layman, Hornady?
I'll still need something  more economical to do an odd lot of a hundred or so.
12/21/2015 9:21:49 PM EDT
[#13]

Quote History
Quoted:


The Giraud looks like the best way to do some volume but I'm loading for .223,300 aac, 243, 7mm mag, 308, 30-06, 270, 8mm Mauser,303 British , 6.5x 55 Swede, 45-70, 357 mag/38, 44mag and a few other that I may have forgotten.

I may just cherry pick a few like the 308 and 30-06 that do multiples.

Is there a lathe type that anyone recommends? RCBS,Layman, Hornady?

I'll still need something  more economical to do an odd lot of a hundred or so.
View Quote




 
I use a Giraud for often loaded cartridges, and a RCBS lathe trimmer for low volume rounds.




Another option is the Wilson lathe trimmer, there are a couple of recent threads about it.
12/21/2015 9:31:10 PM EDT
[#14]
Quote History
Quoted:

  I use a Giraud for often loaded cartridges, and a RCBS lathe trimmer for low volume rounds.


Another option is the Wilson lathe trimmer, there are a couple of recent threads about it.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
The Giraud looks like the best way to do some volume but I'm loading for .223,300 aac, 243, 7mm mag, 308, 30-06, 270, 8mm Mauser,303 British , 6.5x 55 Swede, 45-70, 357 mag/38, 44mag and a few other that I may have forgotten.
I may just cherry pick a few like the 308 and 30-06 that do multiples.
Is there a lathe type that anyone recommends? RCBS,Layman, Hornady?
I'll still need something  more economical to do an odd lot of a hundred or so.

  I use a Giraud for often loaded cartridges, and a RCBS lathe trimmer for low volume rounds.


Another option is the Wilson lathe trimmer, there are a couple of recent threads about it.



This. I use Giraud for anything high production (308, 30-30, 223, 300 blk, and 30-06) and for long range shooting I use the Wilson.
12/21/2015 11:45:21 PM EDT
[#15]
whoa,ive been prepping several thousand cases the last week myself and thought...wtf..this suks!..i bought a wft trimmer.it does go a lot faster than the manual one i have,however it leaves a terrible bur that adds a step to get rid of.im going with the dillon for my 550.
12/22/2015 7:42:43 AM EDT
[#16]
Quote History
Quoted:
Those of you using the Dillon trimmer are you following up with an M Die?
View Quote


M die?
12/22/2015 11:05:14 AM EDT
[#17]
Quote History
Quoted:
The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.

And, I use this same method to prep the brass I use to shoot .223 out to 800 yards.

View Quote



TimpAR, you've got this all wrong.  Who taught you to reload?

You don't chamfer bullets, you chamfer the brass/  Also, you don't shoot brass, you shoot bullets (chamfered or otherwise).  
12/22/2015 11:06:36 AM EDT
[#18]
Quote History
Quoted:
Careful with those statements!  The Brass Nazis will come after you for speaking heresy.  The self anointed preach that to fail to debur and chamfer is blasphemy!  

(Yes, you are correct, you don't need to debur or in many cases chamfer the brass, even for your long range loads.  While I don't go out to 800yds, my 68grn 5.56 level AR loads do well as my 400-500yds apple exploder rds and all they get is trimmed and then tumbled for 15 minutes to remove the lube.  No debur or chamfer, however, I have been repeatedly chastised for evil deeds I espouse.)
     
View Quote


Lots of hate in those words, ... for a heretic!  

I think most recommend deburring and chamfering from dogma but the real issues are uniformity and safety.
12/22/2015 11:12:03 AM EDT
[#19]
Quote History
Quoted:
The Giraud looks like the best way to do some volume but I'm loading for .223,300 aac, 243, 7mm mag, 308, 30-06, 270, 8mm Mauser,303 British , 6.5x 55 Swede, 45-70, 357 mag/38, 44mag and a few other that I may have forgotten.
I may just cherry pick a few like the 308 and 30-06 that do multiples.
Is there a lathe type that anyone recommends? RCBS,Layman, Hornady?
I'll still need something  more economical to do an odd lot of a hundred or so.
View Quote



I think I have to recommend a WIlson lathe trimmer over all the others.  Especially so for your lower volume brass trimming.  

Case holders are inexpensive but you may also find some of the case holders do double duty (multiple cartridges use the same holder).  Wilson also makes pistol case holders for that OCD part of you.
12/22/2015 11:50:02 AM EDT
[#20]
I like reloading for the most part but trimming cases is tedious. I also shoot enough .223 that I wanted to speed things up.

Originally I was using a turret press and handling the brass multiple times just to get them ready for loading. To prep my 6000 cases took days!

I picked up for a song a Gracey trimmer. It has the upgraded motor and an aluminum mounting plate. It came with .223 and .308 dies. This works excellent but still required handling each piece of brass individually.

I bought a Dillon RT1500 trimmer. I finally got around to setting it up yesterday. I have a Hornaday LnL AP press. Now I only handle my brass 2 times, 3 if it is once fired brass.

Once fired, new to me, brass is separated from my reloaded brass. I mark my brass with a permanent ink stamp pad I got from Amazon. This way I know which brass has the primer pockets prepared.

Here is my work flow for brass prep now.

1. Tumble brass after sorting into 2 containers. (My previously loaded brass and new to me brass)
2. Lube a couple hundred cases with spray lube and shake in a large plastic tub.
3. Drop lubed cases into the case feeder.
4. Run through the press. Station 1 is a universal decap die, Station 3 is the Dillon trimmer and station 5 is a Lyman M die to run through the neck to make sure it is uniform tension.
5. Back into the tumbler.

I will be doing the same for .308 and .30-06 when I get ready to load those calibers. If I can get consistent case lengths I will probably sell the Gracey trimmer. So far with .223 the lengths are very consistent.
12/22/2015 5:10:16 PM EDT
[#21]


Quote History
Quoted:





Lots of hate in those words, ... for a heretic!  





I think most recommend deburring and chamfering from dogma but the real issues are uniformity and safety.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:





Quoted:


Careful with those statements!  The Brass Nazis will come after you for speaking heresy.  The self anointed preach that to fail to debur and chamfer is blasphemy!  





(Yes, you are correct, you don't need to debur or in many cases chamfer the brass, even for your long range loads.  While I don't go out to 800yds, my 68grn 5.56 level AR loads do well as my 400-500yds apple exploder rds and all they get is trimmed and then tumbled for 15 minutes to remove the lube.  No debur or chamfer, however, I have been repeatedly chastised for evil deeds I espouse.)


     
Lots of hate in those words, ... for a heretic!  





I think most recommend deburring and chamfering from dogma but the real issues are uniformity and safety.
Not hate . . . . . but a whole lot of wounds to heal from those those who preach demand that it is an act against God to fail to debur and chamfer.  As I've said countless times, I load thousands of flat base and even plated flatbase bullets without chamfering with no ill effects.  Further, name one commercial ammo company who chamfers their match ammo.  I'll wait.  Just one.



BTW, I've found no accuracy differences at all with test chamfered and non-chamfered 68grn Hornady in my Wylde chambered RRA A4 I use for shooting apples at 400+ yds.  None at 100yds, none at 200yds, none at 300yds, none at all.  And these are the same handloads (no chamfer) my son shoots with his Savage Model 10 that produce 5/8" groups for him at 100yds.  



But then again the Brass Nazis will say I'm crazy, unsafe, a danger to small children, and likely a recent escape from some mental institution.





 
12/22/2015 5:58:58 PM EDT
[#22]
I've used the Lee lock stud and will NEVER go back to it.  My case prep is as follows:

1. Tumble brass in vibratory tumbler with walnut media.  I mix in a capful of non flammable paint thinner (cleaner) and some used dryer sheets (catches dust).
2. Tumble brass in vibratory tumbler with corn cob media.  I mix in a capful of NuFinish car wax to really shine them up.  You can use the corn cob sold for reloading, but I don't prefer it because it will stick in your flash hole if the case is deprimed.  I use a finer grit.
3. I then put the cases in a ziplock bag with a squirt of full synthetic motor oil.
4. Resize the case.
5. Trim the case.
6. Wash cases- hot water and dish soap, then rinsed with hot water
7. Dry cases- you can either lay them out or do what I do and put them in the oven at 200 for an hour.

I use one of two methods for steps 4 and 5.

If I'm doing low volume, high precision, I will resize on my single stage and then trim on the RCBS Trim Pro (truthfully I currently use an old model but have asked Santa for the Trim Pro kit).  I like using the 3-way cutter for this because it trims, chamfers, and de-burrs all in one step.

Now, for my high volume (223 for my AR fun guns) I started a new process.  I started doing this two weeks ago, but had the idea when lee first came out with the power adapter for their Trim Pro.  Also, if you search youtube, you can find other folks also thought of this and posted videos before I tried it.

I have on my Lee Load Master a decapping pin in station 1, a resizing die without the decapping pin in station 2, 3 and 4 are empty, and I have a Lee Deluxe Quick Trim with the power attachment locked up in a 9V dewalt in station 5.  You should be able to use just a resizing die in station 1, but for some reason on my 223 die the primers weren't coming all the way out.  Same process as above, I just handle the cases a lot less.  I can resize and trim about 200 cases per hour.  So far this has worked very well.  Cases come out fairly consistent.  If you don't have a progressive press, you could use the Quick Trim on a single stage, you'll just be handling the cases more.  See pic below for set up:



12/22/2015 9:50:04 PM EDT
[#23]
Trimming has always been the biggest PITA to me, followed closely by chamfering necks and uniforming primer pockets/flash holes.  I have a Lyman trimmer that I use with an adapter and small electric drill, its been the fastest method for me.
12/23/2015 5:45:18 AM EDT
[#24]

Quote History
Quoted:
M die?
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:



Quoted:

Those of you using the Dillon trimmer are you following up with an M Die?




M die?
Some say it helps deburr after the Dillon trimmer.

 



12/23/2015 10:56:27 AM EDT
[#25]
Quote History
Quoted:
The Giraud Tri-Way is what you seek.  Around $100. check caliber list

It's a real time saver.  It trims, chamfers, and debur's at the same time.

Get one!   I chuck mine in a high speed electric drill and couldn't be happier.

Or, if you want the powered unit and aren't on a budget, Giraud Trimmer with power ... around $500

The blades/cut are the same in both.
View Quote

I noticed that the WFT and the Giraud tri-way are very similar, which one is better?
12/23/2015 11:05:09 AM EDT
[#26]
Quote History
Quoted:

I noticed that the WFT and the Giraud tri-way are very similar, which one is better?
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
The Giraud Tri-Way is what you seek.  Around $100. check caliber list

It's a real time saver.  It trims, chamfers, and debur's at the same time.

Get one!   I chuck mine in a high speed electric drill and couldn't be happier.

Or, if you want the powered unit and aren't on a budget, Giraud Trimmer with power ... around $500

The blades/cut are the same in both.

I noticed that the WFT and the Giraud tri-way are very similar, which one is better?


Depends on what you want to do.  Both of them use the shoulder of the case as the limiter, so you have to start with properly sized brass to start with.  The Giraud will chamfer and deburr while it cuts.  The WTF does not.  If you buy the WTF2 which has changeable case holders, you can add a cartridge for $25, instead of $100 for another trimmer.  I load a few calibers, so the WTF2 was the way to go for me.  The WTF2 does leave a small burr on every case, or at least it does for me.  Mine simply go back in the SSTL media tumbler to remove this and the sizing lube before loading anyway.  They come out ready to load.
12/23/2015 11:46:47 AM EDT
[#27]
Quote History
Quoted:
Those of you using the Dillon trimmer are you following up with an M Die?
View Quote


I use a 21st Century carbide straight expander die for the 223 brass and 300 BLK is trim my my Honey Badger Trimmer (F&FB) I process commercially in Canada. It more just breaks the edge on the inside of the case mouth and sets proper neck tension.

When I am then loading said brass for myself I do use an M die to get it to work a bit better with the bullet feeder.
12/23/2015 1:57:30 PM EDT
[#28]
I use the Lee trimmer for .223 but with a twist.
12/23/2015 2:28:56 PM EDT
[#29]
Coming from someone with a Hornady Lock-n-load case prep center all I can say is avoid it. Too cumbersome and awkward to use, plus the case length "drifts" as you use it.
12/23/2015 4:03:36 PM EDT
[#30]
Quote History
Quoted:
I use the Lee trimmer for .223 but with a twist.
View Quote


Anyone make something like this that would work for large primers?  Or just a holder that I can hang onto the case with?  After 500 pieces of the WFT my hands get a little sore.
12/23/2015 4:47:59 PM EDT
[#31]
Quote History
Quoted:


Anyone make something like this that would work for large primers?  Or just a holder that I can hang onto the case with?  After 500 pieces of the WFT my hands get a little sore.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
I use the Lee trimmer for .223 but with a twist.


Anyone make something like this that would work for large primers?  Or just a holder that I can hang onto the case with?  After 500 pieces of the WFT my hands get a little sore.

I use these ignition wire pliers (sissy pliers) to hold cases when I'm reaming primer pockets. They would work for the Giraud etc..

12/23/2015 6:21:32 PM EDT
[#32]
Quote History
Quoted:

I use these ignition wire pliers (sissy pliers) to hold cases when I'm reaming primer pockets. They would work for the Giraud etc..
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/71F9eiTH5zL._SX522_.jpg
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
I use the Lee trimmer for .223 but with a twist.


Anyone make something like this that would work for large primers?  Or just a holder that I can hang onto the case with?  After 500 pieces of the WFT my hands get a little sore.

I use these ignition wire pliers (sissy pliers) to hold cases when I'm reaming primer pockets. They would work for the Giraud etc..
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/71F9eiTH5zL._SX522_.jpg


Ive looked for a set of those locally, but no dice.  Any idea where I might get them on the internet?
12/23/2015 8:37:05 PM EDT
[#33]
Quote History
Quoted:


Ive looked for a set of those locally, but no dice.  Any idea where I might get them on the internet?
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
I use the Lee trimmer for .223 but with a twist.


Anyone make something like this that would work for large primers?  Or just a holder that I can hang onto the case with?  After 500 pieces of the WFT my hands get a little sore.

I use these ignition wire pliers (sissy pliers) to hold cases when I'm reaming primer pockets. They would work for the Giraud etc..
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/71F9eiTH5zL._SX522_.jpg


Ive looked for a set of those locally, but no dice.  Any idea where I might get them on the internet?

Amazon or Ebay. There are many different styles to choose from.
12/25/2015 11:21:03 AM EDT
[#34]
I bought a small drill press from Menards when they had a sale going on, best thing I ever bought.  I use a WFT trimmer which has been great.
12/25/2015 12:12:25 PM EDT
[#35]
Quote History
Quoted:

I have a Hornady LNL with a Dillon 1200 trimmer and it turned the chore of case prep into a breeze.  The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.

View Quote

Can anyone tell me how this thing actually does the trimming?  Most trimmers I've seen require some sort of crank or motor.

http://www.dillonprecision.com/#/content/p/9/pid/25244/catid/8/Rapid_Trim_1500___1200_B_Size_Trim_Die
12/25/2015 12:42:37 PM EDT
[#36]


Quote History
Quoted:
Can anyone tell me how this thing actually does the trimming?  Most trimmers I've seen require some sort of crank or motor.





http://www.dillonprecision.com/#/content/p/9/pid/25244/catid/8/Rapid_Trim_1500___1200_B_Size_Trim_Die
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:





Quoted:  Quoted:





I have a Hornady LNL with a Dillon 1200 trimmer and it turned the chore of case prep into a breeze.  The Dillon trimmer cuts very squarely so no deburring is needed, and most bullets don't require chamfering either.





Can anyone tell me how this thing actually does the trimming?  Most trimmers I've seen require some sort of crank or motor.





http://www.dillonprecision.com/#/content/p/9/pid/25244/catid/8/Rapid_Trim_1500___1200_B_Size_Trim_Die



Corrected an inadvertent misquote.  Now to ABQ87120's question.  The picture is of the trim die, not the trimmer.  Each caliber requires a unique trim die that the trimmer screws to.  The black cylinder with the wire is the trimmer mounted on the trim die that's screwed into the toolhead.  The blue collar below it with the hose is to attach your vacuum to it to remove the brass shavings.




 
12/25/2015 1:38:29 PM EDT
[#37]
Quote History
Quoted:
Those of you using the Dillon trimmer are you following up with an M Die?
View Quote


For those who don't know, the Dillon trimmer will size but not expand the case. I have an m die but mine would pull the shoulder forward unless I lubed the inside of the case mouth, something a lube die won't do, so I stopped using it.

I stopped expanding rifle cases a while ago, the boat tail bullets I shoot don't require it. I like to stretch the mouth to yield when seating, gives the most reliable neck tension.
12/25/2015 10:26:00 PM EDT
[#38]
Quote History
Quoted:


Depends on what you want to do.  Both of them use the shoulder of the case as the limiter, so you have to start with properly sized brass to start with.  The Giraud will chamfer and deburr while it cuts.  The WTF does not.  If you buy the WTF2 which has changeable case holders, you can add a cartridge for $25, instead of $100 for another trimmer.  I load a few calibers, so the WTF2 was the way to go for me.  The WTF2 does leave a small burr on every case, or at least it does for me.  Mine simply go back in the SSTL media tumbler to remove this and the sizing lube before loading anyway.  They come out ready to load.
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
The Giraud Tri-Way is what you seek.  Around $100. check caliber list

It's a real time saver.  It trims, chamfers, and debur's at the same time.

Get one!   I chuck mine in a high speed electric drill and couldn't be happier.

Or, if you want the powered unit and aren't on a budget, Giraud Trimmer with power ... around $500

The blades/cut are the same in both.

I noticed that the WFT and the Giraud tri-way are very similar, which one is better?


Depends on what you want to do.  Both of them use the shoulder of the case as the limiter, so you have to start with properly sized brass to start with.  The Giraud will chamfer and deburr while it cuts.  The WTF does not.  If you buy the WTF2 which has changeable case holders, you can add a cartridge for $25, instead of $100 for another trimmer.  I load a few calibers, so the WTF2 was the way to go for me.  The WTF2 does leave a small burr on every case, or at least it does for me.  Mine simply go back in the SSTL media tumbler to remove this and the sizing lube before loading anyway.  They come out ready to load.

There is another one I am considering and that is the Trim-It II.  Anyone else use this?
Armory Sponsor
Close Join Our Mail List to Stay Up To Date! Win a FREE Membership!

Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!

You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.


By signing up you agree to our User Agreement. *Must have a registered ARFCOM account to win.