Bronsin
Silver $$ Contributor
I use the same tool and found that my "feel" with other tools was far more than .002 crush. When I uniform primer pockets, it's with the Sinclair tool that always cuts to a fixed depth. You can always sort primers according to their height to control that variable as well.I have been using the K&M Primer Gauge for a while now. It allows seating each primer to an exact crush in its specific pocket. It saves having to measure each pocket depth and each primer cup height.
I haven't yet experimented with varying seating depths. I seat SR primers with .002" crush and LR primers with .003" crush. I do intend to do do some tuning with primer crush.
I also wonder if sorting cases by primer depth is worthwhile to test. Getting an exact crush seems to be the main thing, but making sure the firing pin fall to the primer is exactly the same might be worthwhile also.
I find up to .004" to .005" variance in primer cup height/pocket depth. I suspect that our uniformed pockets have a little variation, and I know primer cups vary in height.