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Pistol primers in rifle cases

I am new to reloading. I live in a small town and now having a hard time getting primers and powders. Will large pistol primers work in rifle cases. I am loading for .308 in a Rem 700 and a DPMS LR .308. I have the same question about small pistol and small rifle primers. Can I use small pistol in a .223 case?
 
This same question was asked here about a month ago, and a few individuals wrote in to say how they were using them without problems, but if you look at the pressures that .308's and .223's run, and look at pistol pressures, it is apparent that there is a good reason that they manufacture two different classification of primers,,rifle and pistol).
You are asking for real problems by using pistol primers, even magnum primers, in rifle loads.
 
What kind of setup where they using. I don't plan on making this a normal sub, but if I get in a pinch and cant get what I need I want to have a backup. On the same hand I don't want to hurt my rifle or me.
 
This same question was asked here about a month ago, and a few individuals wrote in to say how they were using them without problems, but if you look at the pressures that .308's and .223's run, and look at pistol pressures, it is apparent that there is a good reason that they manufacture two different classification of primers,,rifle and pistol).
You are asking for real problems by using pistol primers, even magnum primers, in rifle loads.
Specifically, what kind of "real problems" are you talking about? Who has done a test of a medium loads with medium bullets in an "expendable" rifle, "expendable" such as a pawn shop "special" in case "real problems" present themselves? fivering's advice lacks any supporting data.
 
Okay; I didn't see this was 15 years old, but maybe this bears saying (for anyone else who considers swapping primer types):

Large rifle and Large pistol primers have different height dimensions. You *might* be able to ignite a small pistol primer in a rifle if you have enough firing pin protrusion, but large rifle primer in a pistol case will probably sit proud of the case base. Pressure issue is another thing to worry about - pistol primers are expected to see less pressure than a rifle primer. Cup hardness and thickness may make rifle primers harder to ignite in a pistol, and may see pistol primers more likely to pierce in a rifle.

Small rifle and pistol primers are the same size, and will interchange OK (with the same pressure and cup caveats.)

If you are swapping primers, stay away from max pressure loads until you verify that the different ignition characteristics aren't going to put you out of the safe range.
 
I've run a little small pistol in .223 before. But I recently had a loose, single Ginex pistol primer that I tossed in a .223 round just to get use it and be done. It slam fired and the cup pierced.

So it really depends on the specific primer.
 
An exception is using a small pistol primer in a .22 Hornet case, e.g., CCI #500. The Hornet has a very small case volume and thin neck walls. A 'powerful' [small rifle] primer will unseat the bullet by itself - before the powder can properly ignite. Therefore, it is preferable to use small pistol primers and possibly Lee Factory Crimp Die .001.”

Remington 6 ½ SRP has a thin .020" cup, intended for older, lower pressure rounds; good for .22 Hornet, .30 Carbine, etc. Remington says do not use for the .223 Rem or other similar pressure rounds.
 
An exception is using a small pistol primer in a .22 Hornet case, e.g., CCI #500. The Hornet has a very small case volume and thin neck walls. A 'powerful' [small rifle] primer will unseat the bullet by itself - before the powder can properly ignite. Therefore, it is preferable to use small pistol primers and possibly Lee Factory Crimp Die .001.”

Remington 6 ½ SRP has a thin .020" cup, intended for older, lower pressure rounds; good for .22 Hornet, .30 Carbine, etc. Remington says do not use for the .223 Rem or other similar pressure rounds.
I do use small pistol primers in Hornet class cartridges.
 
I was always told pistol primers in rifles was ok but rifle primers in pistols was not.
Idk ...
 
Either cross over could be problematic in certain circumstances. Obviously LARGE primers are not even a consideration.

My only problem with rifle in pistol ammo was the cups were too thick for reliable ignition in a striker fired pistol.
 
This all goes back 125 years to the introduction of smokeless powder’s. Up until that time there was basically little primer, big primer with no real method to the madness. Imagine a cartridge not much bigger than a 22 Hornet case using a large pistol/rifle primer.

Then there were large and small primers with the cups made of different materials, brass or copper the most prevalent choices. The start of tayloring to higher pressure loads.

With the advent of SAAMI, primer size became standardized. But there a few cartridges that were either never submitted, or fell off the list. A good example is the 32-40. Published data for the 32-40 still lists the primer as an 1 1/2, or large pistol.

It’s not uncommon to use pistol primers in reduced or subsonic loads in rifle cartridges because depending on the powder used, people have noted smaller ES/SD numbers.

Then there all sorts of handgun exceptions like the 357 Max. Which load data recommends small rifle primers. The 454 Casull and 500 S&W that use smal rifle, large rifle respectively.

Pressure certainly plays a huge role in primer choice, but not always.

But when you look at safety as the key factor, a higher pressure rated primer is most often the safest. The exception to that would be a primer too hard for the ignition system of the firearm that could lead to hang fires. Or too soft in an auto loader allowing slam fires.

Simply saying that pistol primers for pistols, rifle for rifle and/or stick to published data will often be contradictory.
 

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