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I spoke with a guy who was thinking about using a Lee hand press with a decapping die. Not sure if he did it or if it would work (I’ve neber held, let alone used a lee hand press), but in theory it seems like it would do the job.
I recently got the Frankford Arsenal tool and did 300 cases. Worked flawlessly but spent primers can fall out of the catch cup if you don't keep it pointed down. Chucked up the pin in a drill press and filed it down to fit Lapua SP brass.
No "hunting" for the hole. Lines up perfect every time.
Go for it. A caliber specific pilot and appropriate sized pin makes it easy enough.
I like to decap before tumbling though I don't think it's necessary I do think it's a good idea.
On the other hand, although I have a couple Pope style with bases and pilots mostly for range use and a couple punch and base custom lathe turned to fit I use a Frankfort Arsenal when it fits well because it captures the primers. A punch and base set on top of a board with a hole in it to guide the decapped primers works well too. I am conscious that primers are lead styphenate and appreciate the decapped primer handling of a Coax or Redding T7 or other setup that captures the loose primers.
For range scrap brass and pistol cases using a flash hole deburring tool - a one shot operation - can help funnel the decapping pin into the flash hole.
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