I'm lazy and loading for two shooters... I tumble off the case lube; 1 hour in the vibratory.Regular cleaning. You gotta be kidding me. I wipe the necks off with a Scotchbrite pad. Roll between paper towels with brake cleaner to remove case lube.
I'm lazy and loading for two shooters... I tumble off the case lube; 1 hour in the vibratory.Regular cleaning. You gotta be kidding me. I wipe the necks off with a Scotchbrite pad. Roll between paper towels with brake cleaner to remove case lube.
I haven't cleaned a primer pocket in probably 25 years. Nor have I uniformed one in 30 years.
How many thousands of rounds have you, and many of the experienced shooters on this site seated? Probably more in a year, than many of us have seated in our lifetime. I have no doubt that you can seat by feel as consistent as I can using the fanciest seating tool. Removing the buildup helps me to be consistent and based on what I have read, inconsistent primer seating depth shows up on the target. I believe this to be true.I have never seen a flash hole change size in 45 years of shooting. We run decapping pins through them and on a PPC that's a close fit between the pin and the flash hole. When we used Wilson neck dies I never had one hang up on the decapping pin. Even in large magnums I've never seen any build up that affected anything. I do seat by feel. Touch then crush. The hand priming tool stops in the same location each time.
Here's another thing I don't do. Anneal. I have 16 cases for my PPC. I shot the Shamrock and Super Shoot as well as a lot of practice with that set. I know that's approaching at least 600 rounds. That works out to 37 firings on each case that I FL size each time. Time to get a new barrel on order.
It's about consistency and your mental state.
YMMV
I agree that inconsistent and/or improper depth can probably have an affect on accuracy. Possibly miniature hang fires. Build up no. As easily as the residue breaks up the primer is accomplishing the same thing. The question is does the dust left in the pocket cause a problem. I've never seen it. If it does it gets lost in the noise of more important matters. I am not the shooter I used to be. Time has taken it's toll but I still know when my rifle is or isn't shooting well.How many thousands of rounds have you, and many of the experienced shooters on this site seated? Probably more in a year, than many of us have seated in our lifetime. I have no doubt that you can seat by feel as consistent as I can using the fanciest seating tool. Removing the buildup helps me to be consistent and based on what I have read, inconsistent primer seating depth shows up on the target. I believe this to be true.
I would be willing to bet, based on your success, that you meticulously keep your brass in the same rotation and can account for every shot. It is probably second nature for you. It is a difficult task for me, probably because I don’t start off with enough cases.
Do you think that build up in the primer pocket can affect ignition?
Don’t know what you mean by ‘miniature’.I was getting miniature hang fires.
Some you know about and some you don't. I was focused on the shot and observers had to tell me there was a click bang.Don’t know what you mean by ‘miniature’.
FTF is one thing but a hang fire is frightening.
I assume the muzzle was pointed down range when this occurred.