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Area Man said:"now if all your primer pockets are the same depth, you can adjust a tool to seat and crush the exact same....uniformity is a good thing."
Crush? I've always seated primers to where they felt like it was far as they wanted to go. Would "crush" be after this?
stool said:yep////just a "bit' more ....straight from a primer manufacture...tho i cannot remember who....have seen it mention several times over the years......
Area Man said:"now if all your primer pockets are the same depth, you can adjust a tool to seat and crush the exact same....uniformity is a good thing."
Crush? I've always seated primers to where they felt like it was far as they wanted to go. Would "crush" be after this?
Area Man said:stool said:yep////just a "bit' more ....straight from a primer manufacture...tho i cannot remember who....have seen it mention several times over the years......
Area Man said:"now if all your primer pockets are the same depth, you can adjust a tool to seat and crush the exact same....uniformity is a good thing."
Crush? I've always seated primers to where they felt like it was far as they wanted to go. Would "crush" be after this?
Would that be a "tad bit" or a "full bit" more?![]()
DanConzo said:Stool--If your primer pockets are all the same depth but your primers are not the same heighth ( top of anvils to base) and you set your primer seater to a specific setting they will not all have the same crush or uniform seating depth, some may not even bottom out.
I have the 21st century tool. The adjustability allows you to compensate for differences in primer pocket depth and front of rim locations so that you can have your handle stroke where you want it, far enough out so that it does not bottom on the tool body when seating by feel, yet close enough so that it is comfortable and has the best available leverage. For me, the adjustable seating depth thing is not an issue, because I seat by feel, but I like the feature a lot. I have an older Sinclair, that I have had to adjust for wear from time to time, and that adjustment is a lot less convenient. When properly adjusted, they both work just fine. The workmanship on the 21st Century is outstanding.
One of two videosThe 21st Century Priming tool has the adjustment for primer seating depth. I always just seated primers to the bottom of the cup. Can someone enlighten me about the need to adjust the seating depth?
I guess my point is that the vast majority of the guys who shoot the best in the world at distances of 300 yards and less, seat their primers by FEEL, not by depth. I have mentioned this before. Some time back I called CCI and spoke to a tech. about how they recommend primers be seated. He told me that their recommendation is that the force be enough to result in the bottoms of the anvil feet FLUSH with the bottom of the cup. Depending on the primer, this can take quite a bit of force on a hand priming tool. The next time you have nothing better to do, with great care, and eye protection on, do an experiment, priming different ways and then carefully unpriming the cases and examining the primers under considerable magnification, as well as comparing before and after primer thicknesses, and of course seating depth.Dang! I’ve been seating mine to .006 using the K&M tool.
I’m using my caliper to measure it. Is there a better way to measure primer depth?