Hello,
I have been reloading for about a year now, and I had never paid close attention to the way I was seating my primers. I realized that most of my primers had a small indentation from the priming tool I use. I guess I was pushing the primers too much into the case. Well, I changed my style, and I started applying less force into the primers. Well they looked very nice, but then when I was seating the bullets, I started noticing that the bullet seating was not consistent since I was measuring each case after I seated each bullet. They usually vary a couple of thousands, but this time they varied way too much. Well I realized that the primer was sticking out of the case and thats what was giving me a difference in the measurement of the seating depth. It was not that the bullet was wrong, but the primer was giving me false readings.
how do you seat your primers? whats the solution to this? do I just jam the primers all the way in? even though i leave indentation marks?
Thank you,
Gil
I have been reloading for about a year now, and I had never paid close attention to the way I was seating my primers. I realized that most of my primers had a small indentation from the priming tool I use. I guess I was pushing the primers too much into the case. Well, I changed my style, and I started applying less force into the primers. Well they looked very nice, but then when I was seating the bullets, I started noticing that the bullet seating was not consistent since I was measuring each case after I seated each bullet. They usually vary a couple of thousands, but this time they varied way too much. Well I realized that the primer was sticking out of the case and thats what was giving me a difference in the measurement of the seating depth. It was not that the bullet was wrong, but the primer was giving me false readings.
how do you seat your primers? whats the solution to this? do I just jam the primers all the way in? even though i leave indentation marks?
Thank you,
Gil