Here’s the problem - I have a good supply of perfect condition British manufactured 10 gauge 2 5/8” paper cased ammunition, loaded in “Gastight” hulls and I want to reload the empties as they accumulate. The hulls are excellent, very solid, very well made, they should make great reloads, especially for black powder loads but I have a primer problem here that I’ve never run into before. The fired primers are VERY tight and hard to remove but worse, they seem to be slightly larger than modern 209 primers. 209 primers just drop into ( and out of) the primer pockets. The base flange of the originals appear to be about .015” larger and the body about .005” larger than fired Federal or Winchester 209 primers. So what to do? I’ve been loading shotshells for 35+ years, I’ve loaded hundreds of thousands of target loads and I have almost 150 different loads in my reloading log but I’m stumped. I know Remington once made a smaller primer (#97?) but I’ve never heard of a larger one. Of course these are British and judging by the phone number on the box they likely have originated long ago, probably before WW2 so maybe this is just a lost cause. Any ideas?
Pictured, left to right - Federal from factory Gold medal, mystery Brit, Winchester from factory AA.
Pictured, left to right - Federal from factory Gold medal, mystery Brit, Winchester from factory AA.