I have mounted my press and want to test the seating depth of my RCBS ram prime unit. Do I need to use the brass I intend to reload, or will any 308 brass work? Might be a dumb question, but thought it was worth asking. Thx in advance
You are right,the Op was mentioning the RCBS,just wanted to show there are other ways . I think I saw somewhere there is a mod for the RCBS,not sure if it deals with depth or not though . I go by feel these days,tried a bunch of priming tools through the years.Thanks
I read the OP as using the RCBS mounted primer arm
Lyman looks interesting.
I actually do seat by feel with a hand primer.Fellows, the most accurate shooters that I know of, short range benchrest group competitors, seat by feel. There seems to be a fraction of reloaders who go by what seems to be rather than by proven results. Since a lot of folks that do not post read, let me be clear. I think that seating by depth is a mistake. Unless you can prove conclusively, by match or test results that I am wrong, you are proceeding based on what you think should be true, and IMO actual results trump you would think, or it seems to me, every time.
Fellows, the most accurate shooters that I know of, short range benchrest group competitors, seat by feel. There seems to be a fraction of reloaders who go by what seems to be rather than by proven results. Since a lot of folks that do not post read, let me be clear. I think that seating by depth is a mistake. Unless you can prove conclusively, by match or test results that I am wrong, you are proceeding based on what you think should be true, and IMO actual results trump you would think, or it seems to me, every time.
I am not sure what you mean by fully inserted, but if by that you mean to the point where you feel them touch the bottom of the primer pocket, you are. Bart Sauter did a shooting test and said that based on his results as long as the primer is bottomed you will have the best results.
Other than not seating to a particular depth, I have no particular prejudice against any method of priming. One thing that I will tell you, some decades back, curious about how well priming with the primer arm would work I tried it on a few cases...then just for comparison, I redid them with my RCBS hand priming tool and with the hand primer, although I am sure that they were bottomed, I seated them a bit deeper. What I concluded was that at the point of the ram stroke that the primer arm is seating a primer, that the leverage is not all that great, compared to what my hand too was giving me (of course I was a bit gorilla fisted back then). Obviously the priming arm works, but I felt like I had a better feel with the hand unit. In the case of the ram priming unit that I posted a link to, you can vary the leverage by how high the punch sticks out, which is adjusted by how high the body of the tool is in the press. Properly adjusted you have really great feel and control. If you get it too low, you have so much leverage that you feel like you could easily damage the case. I just assume that people have the common sense to proceed carefully and be observant. BTW, back then I actually ruined the main casting of that RCBS hand tool by repeatedly putting so much pressure on the handle while priming that I bent the lips that retain the shell holder. I was young, doing a lot of construction work, an approached reloading in a much more ham fisted manner. There is a useful lesson in this story. I never had a problem with any of those primers going off. They all worked just fine.Interesting, what is the advantage over the standard attachment with the tube that holds 50 primer
??? I already have the tool
Yes Boyd, that's what I am talking about
You are right,the Op was mentioning the RCBS,just wanted to show there are other ways . I think I saw somewhere there is a mod for the RCBS,not sure if it deals with depth or not though . I go by feel these days,tried a bunch of priming tools through the years.
Edit: Found it,right here on the bulletin. Looks very interesting .
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2018/10/darrell-holland-upgrade-for-rcbs-bench-priming-tool/
Sounds like a winner, I like the idea of adjusting and the fact you can go by feel also . Thanks for the info.I've got one of the Holland add-ons and it works well. You can use the tool with the adjustment wheel or without. It takes some practice to use this by feel but, you most certainly can. Of course, the adjustment wheel works great if your primer pockets have been worked on.
