Hello, I'm back from the reloading shop and did not return the RCBS priming tool.
The owner mentioned that "all" manufactures brass needs to have the primer pocket crimp removed. He sold me a Lyman primer pocket reamer (small) #7777784. This tool removes military crimps and rough edges from a primer pocket I thought only Military brass needed this step. My error here.
Is it correct to say all brass new and old should get go thru this step?
So i'm going to start by saying that the only brass I have is once or twice fired. It was sorted by Manufacturer. Winchester, Remington, Federal, Lake City and a bucket for miscellaneous brass. At this stage I've prepped only LC brass.
When I was prepping LC brass I did see some of the primer pockets had a straight primer wall. Tonight I'm going to go back and use the Lyman Primer pocket reamer on 25 pieces of LC brass and then use the RCBS hand primer tool to see if it works flawlessly.
I will let you know results.
Regards
Dave
The owner mentioned that "all" manufactures brass needs to have the primer pocket crimp removed. He sold me a Lyman primer pocket reamer (small) #7777784. This tool removes military crimps and rough edges from a primer pocket I thought only Military brass needed this step. My error here.
Is it correct to say all brass new and old should get go thru this step?
So i'm going to start by saying that the only brass I have is once or twice fired. It was sorted by Manufacturer. Winchester, Remington, Federal, Lake City and a bucket for miscellaneous brass. At this stage I've prepped only LC brass.
When I was prepping LC brass I did see some of the primer pockets had a straight primer wall. Tonight I'm going to go back and use the Lyman Primer pocket reamer on 25 pieces of LC brass and then use the RCBS hand primer tool to see if it works flawlessly.
I will let you know results.
Regards
Dave