Has anyone taken the unfired primers apart and measured a significant number for cup height and depth?
Then the next would be for anvil height...
Are they different, or exactly the same from cup to cup and anvil to anvil?
Being very curious person, yes. . . I've taken some unfired primers apart to weigh and measure; mainly to see how the height measurements compared to a chart that's floated around with measurement info for various primers (see pic below). I looked at some CCI 400's and some Federal 210's. The cups and anvils I had did not vary at all in cup height, though the overall heights did vary due to how the anvil is seated in the cups. Note too that there's 4 components to a primer, the foil being one that tend to be overlooked.
That foil tends to attribute some variance in over all primer height. For example, when I looked at the CCI 400's, the over all height being at .122". The cup height was .110 (instead of the chart's .109"). When I pulled the anvils, the foil was stuck to them along with a very thin layer of primer compound, which resulted in a heights of .910". After removing the foil from the anvils, the anvils measured consistently at .900". With primer height at .122" and the cup at .110", the anvil was above the cup by .012" and .078" into the cup. That foil being ~.008" thick (being felt with some expansion, having absorbed some of the moist primer compound when installed) probably isn't normally that thick.
Sample size was only a few primers and I know using my caliper for these measurements is not, what I'd call, very accurate, but it's good enough for me.
If, in fact they are the same, then for seating, primer cup depth would mean more than the amount of crush.
If they vary, then what is the correct way to measure their weight, and how do you decide on seating depth from primer to primer?
In the example above, the overall height and that anvil at .012" above the cup is what tells me how deep I want to seat my primers when I know how deep the primer pockets are to get ~.004 "crush" that I'm after.
I do measure a good sample size from a brick of primers to find the variance, which can be ~.003". I'll use the shortest measurement to determine my seating depth, as measured below the case base. That means when I seat to the same distance below flush, I'm getting a little more crush on the thicker primers, which is ok since, like on the example above with .012" of anvil above the cup) there's plenty of room and that difference in crush has no measurable affect.
Since winter is near, this is just some more food for thought to throw into the weighing and testing side of things.
And being retired with plenty of time on hand helps too.
