Which hand priming tool do you prefer?

Armored Metal

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Hi guys,

I'm still pretty new to reloading (1 1/2 year) and I've been priming "on" the press since the begining.

Now there seems to be a concensus in the reloading world, that you get a better feel for it when using a hand priming tool. So I watched a bunch of youtube videos and the Lyman E-Zee tool caught my eye. It looks sturdy and user friendly.

What do you guys think and what do you use?

Thanks
 
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I have a old Lee and it works fine. The new design is better (???) so when this ones calls it a day will switch to their newer model. Just primed around 550 .223 with no problems.
 
I used the old Lee priming tools years ago, and was happy with them, but the new one I have now is a complete piece of shyte. I much prefer my RCBS Universal hand priming tool.
 
Have both the old and new Lees. Have primed thousands and thousands of cases. Both work well; new one is redesigned to prevent detonation in the magazine.
 
I've been using the RCBS hand primer for a few years, and thousands of rounds.
I won't say it's better than Lee, but I will say; everything green is better than red :p.

Kidding aside, how the hell did you go this long, using the press? You're in for a treat.
 
Been using the Lee for a couple decades or so, never had a problem, switching primer size takes all of a minute or so. Maybe there are better but I'm happy enough with the old Lee that I'm not even interested in trying anything else.
 
I use the Hornady one that came with my kit, the RCBS hand primer, and the RCBS bench-mounted APS primer.

The Hornady and the RCBS hand primers are comparable, although I very much like the 'gate' feature on the RBCS unit that is supposed to prevent sympathetic detonation of the primers in the tray, should a primer go off while being seated.

The bench-mounted APS unit is fantastically fast and consistent when it's working, but it's finicky and occasionally jams. The best part about it, when it's working, is that you don't have to gauge the primer depth by feel-- you set it so that the handle bottoms out at a position that's guaranteed to seat the primer at the proper depth, and then you forget about it and just run the handle the full range of motion for each stroke.
 
I used LEE for many years, but I gave away the LEE, after trying the RCBS Universal hand priming tool.
I have an old Lee and old RCBS. I broke the 'piston rod' on the Lee so bought the RCBS (and found out the shell holders were different.....) What makes these work really well is cleaning the primer pocket. (Lee makes this tool). It's an extra (dirty) step but worth it, IMO. I contacted Lee a few years back and they sent me a new part so now use both. The RCBS is definitely a better built tool but they both work OK (and cleaning the pockets really helps).
 
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