When Remington and Winchester lost the very lucrative contract to produce the ammunition at Lake City Army Ammunition Plant they both fell on hard times.
After losing the military contract at Lake City Winchester sold off its brass manufacturing plant and now buys its brass from the cheapest vendor.
Money is the bottom line.
The Iraq war is over and Afghanistan is winding down to an ending.
Winchester manufactures contract ammunition for the military and the "
unplated" primers are "
crimped" in place.
All my plated Winchester primers are older and the correct size and I do not have any unplated primers.
This is a WAG but it appears Winchester has a overabundance of leftover military contract primers.
And this is my scrap brass bucket full of military "
once fired" 5.56 ammunition with "
over sized" primer pockets that can't be reloaded.
Below, a .1750 pin gauge in a once fired oversized primer pocket headed to the scrap bucket.
My test criteria, if the primer can be pushed out of the primer pocket using a Lee depriming tool and pressure from one finger, the brass is junk.
The following message was brought to you by:
The "I hate skinny primers and fat primer pockets" senior citizens alliance.
(a splinter group of AARP) :
