Thanks for your info. Will try them. Reason is, i have a bunch of them.If they work in 223 they’ll work in 222 std or Mag. Go for it.
Wanting to use Wolf srm primers in a 222. Did a search but didn't find much info.
Will be using h322. Hoping someone has tried this combo.
I should have mentioned I will try the 52gr Berger.Well maybe. Some call the Remington 7 1/2 a magnum primer, some don't. H322 is an easy to light powder. Unless I am using a Rem 7 1/2, I don't use a magnum primer with it. I just haven't gotten the same accuracy and ES and SD with magnum primers in the small capacity cases.
They will work, they may not perform as well.
I should have mentioned I will try the 52gr Berger.
What powder did you use?My old Vixen 222 loves the 52 Bergers, the ground hogs not so much.
+1 ,worth repeating...they will work just fine,they may just become your primer of choice.The Wolf srm primers have worked as well, or better, than any other primer I've used in an ancient Model 70 .222, and I've used most of them. They'll be fine, I'd bet.
Others worked, but I settled on H-4198. Mine showed a preference to 4198 with 40 V Max also. Been though several powders, bullet and primer combos. Always chalked it up to a 1966 Rifle was only capable of so much. Then came one last go with the 52 Berger. Dead calm summer evening benched at 300 it went a couple thou over and inch and repeated. That's when I figure even a dummy knows to leave well enough alone.What powder did you use?
I found an increase in SD and an overall decrease in accuracy when switching from Remington 7 1/2’s to CCI 450 magnum’s in 223. That was in conjunction with 53gr V-Max’s and CFE 223
The Rem 7 1/2 is a 'magnum' primer so you're comparing 'magnum to magnum' here. (The Rem 6 1/2 is the 'standard' version.)
SR primers display different ignition characteristics according to make and model but far less difference between 'standard' and 'magnum' than in the LR type. The main difference between grades is in cup thickness, the original models (CCI and Remington) being thin-walled and relatively weak to suit 22 Hornet and Bee pressures and also provide reliable ignition in many pre-war converted rifles with weak ignition systems. Remington introduced the 7 1/2 'magnum' with its thicker cup (0.025 v 0.020") in the early 1950s along with the 222 Remington cartridge, the first modern 'high-pressure' 22 centrefire factory design. Those early 7 1/2s were chemically / explosively identical to the thin wall 6 1/2 model. The 7 1/2 became the 7 1/2BR with a slightly 'warmer' explosive pellet later when Remington introduced the .17 Remington cartridge and AFAIK the plain 7 1/2 variety dropped out of production a long time ago.
In the primer tests ran by German Salazar, the pictures showed that Rem 71/2 and Winchester SRM showed to be the biggest flame throwers.
When I shot Highpower I loaded my 600 yard ammo in Remington URBR cases. Loaded them with 7-1/2 Remington primers but I never used anything other than 4064. I had heard that hangfires were an issue with small primers in 308 though I never had any.Those tests go back a fair few years now and primers change over time. For instance, Winchester only makes a single Small Rifle model these days, the WSR, and it is a very different animal from the WSR of 12 or 15 years ago with a thinner cup and possibly different explosive characteristics. When I started handloading 223 seriously many years back an early purchase was Glen Zediker's first book, The Competitive AR15, according to which the WSR was the XTC shooter's favourite model - reliable, good ballistics, tough cup. That was the old 'silver' (nickel plated) WSR, then for some reason it was made much thinner / weaker in its more recent brass colour form, so is rather lacking in cartridges like the 223 when run hot.
Russian made primers (PMC brand at one time here in Europe, nowadays Murom; Wolf or Tula in the US, but all from the same manufacturer) change a great deal IME and apparently can vary considerably lot to lot too. As best as I can work out, there was a standard SR (KVB-223), a 'magnum' variant (KVB-5,56) and now there is a more recent variant called 'SR-223' on the Murom version's 100-ct sleeve, but as I've not seen a 5,000-ct cardboard 'outer' yet, don't know its 'KVB' product code. The basic model which originally had a deep copper colour cup, now bronze, is an excellent mild model, but was / is hopelessly weak for high pressure cartridges and very prone to blanking and cratering. The SRM version was chemically identical but with a thicker / tougher cup having been designed for 5.56mm military ammunition which in Europe is rated 4,300 bar / 62,366 psi - hence its 'KVB-5,56' coding. However Murom (the actual Russian company name based on the town it's located in) got feedback that many US AR shooters were having ignition problems with (a) recently introduced ball type powder(s), and the SR-223 is as per the 'magnum' cup wise but has a warmer pellet to give reliable ignition with whatever is the hard to ignite powder(s).
(I suspect that the powder in question is CFE-223 having found that it shouldn't be used in SRP 308 Lapua 'Palma' brass, some SR primers proving inadequate for 44-47gn charges here and producing serial hangfires and also the occasional complete misfire. This is the only powder I've tried in 308 that has suffered this problem - even the old Olin Corp W760 / H414 performed fine.)
When I shot Highpower I loaded my 600 yard ammo in Remington URBR cases. Loaded them with 7-1/2 Remington primers but I never used anything other than 4064. I had heard that hangfires were an issue with small primers in 308 though I never had any.