I have a couple of brands in stock. Hornady, Armscor & converted LC brass. The converted brass is already primed too. Please take a look at my website.
Regards, Henry
Are the converted LC brass primers crimped in? The webpage mentions mil-spec primers...
I would very much doubt it, the original Lake City crimps would have been removed in order to press the new mil-spec primers
Actually, according to Henry, they are crimped in.
In which case, I can guess the following:
Primed LaKe City 5.56 was cut and formed into 300 BLK so the necks must not be annealed because of the risk of primer detonation. If so, I wouldn't touch that brass.
O.P. - make you own 300 BLK cases. Very easy if you get a "Harbor Freight" cut-off saw. Annealing takes some time but you will have all-matching cases with the ability to make more anytime.
Are the converted LC brass primers crimped in? The webpage mentions mil-spec primers...
In which case, I can guess the following:
Primed LaKe City 5.56 was cut and formed into 300 BLK so the necks must not be annealed because of the risk of primer detonation. If so, I wouldn't touch that brass.
O.P. - make you own 300 BLK cases. Very easy if you get a "Harbor Freight" cut-off saw. Annealing takes some time but you will have all-matching cases with the ability to make more anytime.
I have some 300BLK brass (Rem 223 converted) with 6 or 7 loadings on them and have never annealed them, all still in good condition. No need to anneal from what I've seen so far.



























