Looking for a hand priming tool i saw mentioned a couple months ago. It had adjustable primer seating depth and i beleive it even came with a tray but not positive on that.
I’ll just keep using my old Lee hand primer.
I have the lee but have found that on the tighter pockets it just doesnt have enough stroke to push the primers flush.
I have the lee but have found that on the tighter pockets it just doesnt have enough stroke to push the primers flush. I end up having to run them thru a rcbs bench primer to get them to go that last .002"-.003"
That's not the problem, the problem arises from the fact that on my lee tool the seating stem is not long enough.fix your primer pockets,
quit putting bandaids on the symptom
I had one of those a long time ago and the problem is that the pot metal wears. I was able to fix that by filing down the main casting a bit. The shell holder opening direction was changed, but I got my stoke length back. Soon after that I got a tool made from better materials. I am all for tradition but I care more about well built tools, particularly if I am going to use them a lot. Currently the best one that I own is a 21st Century, which is a piece of functional art.I have the lee but have found that on the tighter pockets it just doesnt have enough stroke to push the primers flush. I end up having to run them thru a rcbs bench primer to get them to go that last .002"-.003"
I had one of those a long time ago and the problem is that the pot metal wears...
That's not the problem, the problem arises from the fact that on my lee tool the seating stem is not long enough.
That's not the problem, the problem arises from the fact that on my lee tool the seating stem is not long enough.
Thank you for the help. Ill look into the 21st cent. ToolsI had one of those a long time ago and the problem is that the pot metal wears. I was able to fix that by filing down the main casting a bit. The shell holder opening direction was changed, but I got my stoke length back. Soon after that I got a tool made from better materials. I am all for tradition but I care more about well built tools, particularly if I am going to use them a lot. Currently the best one that I own is a 21st Century, which is a piece of functional art.
Ill check on that, thank u for ur info.have you looked to see if the tool is broken ?
early tools had thin metal at the shell holder and would crack.
this would show as high primers when the crack was just starting.
sorry, something is not correct.
call lee and ask for anther ram
i own more than 10 lee primer seating tools...none have this issue