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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Depriming live primers
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<blockquote data-quote="crkckr" data-source="post: 1609018" data-attributes="member: 78056"><p>Yes, it does look too deep, but have you tried putting one in your rifle and pulling the trigger? You might be surprised. If the FP dent is lite or it doesn't fire, clearly there's a problem. I have been reloading since my late teens (knocking on the door of 70 now) and I have been using the decapping rods from the Lee "basher" kits to remove live primers for years without incident. I use a rubber hammer and gently tap them out (in the Lee fixture) & have never once set one off. I do wear safety glasses (duh!) and the only thing in any kind of danger is the light over my bench. It's possible the brass just has a too deeply formed pocket, in which case send 'em back to be replaced. If it's a factory defect, they shouldn't all be that way, their QC is *usually* fairly good.</p><p>Cheers, </p><p>crkckr</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="crkckr, post: 1609018, member: 78056"] Yes, it does look too deep, but have you tried putting one in your rifle and pulling the trigger? You might be surprised. If the FP dent is lite or it doesn't fire, clearly there's a problem. I have been reloading since my late teens (knocking on the door of 70 now) and I have been using the decapping rods from the Lee "basher" kits to remove live primers for years without incident. I use a rubber hammer and gently tap them out (in the Lee fixture) & have never once set one off. I do wear safety glasses (duh!) and the only thing in any kind of danger is the light over my bench. It's possible the brass just has a too deeply formed pocket, in which case send 'em back to be replaced. If it's a factory defect, they shouldn't all be that way, their QC is *usually* fairly good. Cheers, crkckr [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Depriming live primers
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