Been using one 50+ yrs.agree with you 100%.Work the RCBS like a normal person and there won't be any problems. Pay attention to when you get to the last cartridge and a LITTLE care the last one won't jump out or flip either. Been using one for the last 10 or so years.
When I was looking to replace the hand primers the customer reviews proved what I suspected - not ready for prime time. I am talking about reviews on Grafs, Brownells, and Midway- not Amazon as those customers have no clue.Please tell me what is wrong with the Lee, except the price.
I found it to be a great priming tool once it got kind of broken in. It stopped jamming and feeds perfectly. One thing I believe helped was to coat the working surfaces with HBN to make the primer slide thru the feed process. Takes a little time and effort with a small piece of cloth wrapped around a blunt pick to get into the tiny places but well worth it.I just did 800 223 in one sitting this morning with my cheapo LEE bench primer--you have to learn it's little quirks and how the tray works etc like any tool but after a year and half I love it--great feel and if it broke I would buy another tomorrow--
late season prairie dogs--look out!
That's an issue the old round tray hand unit had too, broke two of them that way, 3 handles. I started acquiring spares, have a few now.My Lee benchtop priming tool broke on me sometime back. I had a new in the box RCBS benchtop priming tool. Pulled it out of the drawer, set it up, and commenced to priming. (Lee) The metal on top of the shell holder broke off allowing the shell holder to pop out. For the money the Lee will prime good and fast. I wonder if Lee warranties stuff like this, and even if it's worth it.