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Same here. I shoot my own at the range and hunting grounds and save the many thousands of rounds of mil-surp I bought decades ago for whatever 'pocalypse decides to come to my sleepy little village. Odds are it will all be over before I run out of belt ammo so, what's the sense in worrying about reloading more than a few thousand rounds plus the mil-surp, plus my stock of regular boxed commercial factory ammo...etc.? If I really, really, need a green and yellow box of .35Remington 150gr. SPCL, I have a few or dozen locked away; I don't need to whip out the Midway catalog.
I reload for my guns, not anybody else's and the box labels say so. I use a Dymo label printer loaded with shipping labels. This system looks like it would work for my purposes just fine for semi-auto where I won't necessarily get my empties back in the box - a bag works fine or a bucket - but for revolvers I like to bring home empties. For things like, ".32-20 for Colt's Official Police," versus .".32-20 for S&W 1905 4th Change" then the load data and details. Some loads - like .38Spl wadcutters and round nose - are for any gun in that caliber but some are custom for only one gun and the labels say so. I load for a Webley Mk.1 that's been cut back for .45ACP/AR. It's a black-powder era revolver and needs black-powder pressures, a hollow-base .455 diameter bullet in a .45AR or ACP case with moon-clips... You won't find that on a shelf anywhere except in my gun room.