I think it's pretty well known that Federal primers are pretty "soft" in that they don't take much of a strike to set them off compared to other primers. It's also one of the aspects that makes Federal primers pretty desirable in some cases. And less desirable in other applications like some semi autos that have a floating firing pin. I also know LEE recommends against Federals in their hand primer but from "gun talk" back before the internet days I also heard there was some dispute between Federal and LEE and that recommendation may have arose from that. I've loaded thousands of Federal primers with a LEE hand primer.
Dogleg has clearly been handloading a long time and I'm not going to tell him he's wrong as I'm pretty damn sure he knows what he's doing but I somewhat think this is "operator error." The reason I say this is because when I started loading (almost as long ago as Dogleg) and I first needed to pull some bullets using an inertia puller I did some hard whack whack whack and then stopped myself. These pullers didn't really come with detailed instructions so thought about what I was doing and what I wanted to accomplish - which wasn't anything like driving a nail with a hammer. I put on some ear muffs because it was loud and annoying and then some safety glasses because I was a new handloader and was a bit scared. Then I modified my hammer hits to be sort of a lazy arm stroke without gripping the puller too tight. It is swing, bounce swing bounce etc, never being too rigid. I used to use a metal part of my bench and now I just use the flat spot on a bench vice. Anvil would do too.
Ultimately, it's about INERTIA and not about force.
That said, I've broken a couple of these pullers using this technique so maybe my method is wrong?
I'm sure Dogleg will fill us in with his method, maybe we can all learn something.
Dogleg has clearly been handloading a long time and I'm not going to tell him he's wrong as I'm pretty damn sure he knows what he's doing but I somewhat think this is "operator error." The reason I say this is because when I started loading (almost as long ago as Dogleg) and I first needed to pull some bullets using an inertia puller I did some hard whack whack whack and then stopped myself. These pullers didn't really come with detailed instructions so thought about what I was doing and what I wanted to accomplish - which wasn't anything like driving a nail with a hammer. I put on some ear muffs because it was loud and annoying and then some safety glasses because I was a new handloader and was a bit scared. Then I modified my hammer hits to be sort of a lazy arm stroke without gripping the puller too tight. It is swing, bounce swing bounce etc, never being too rigid. I used to use a metal part of my bench and now I just use the flat spot on a bench vice. Anvil would do too.
Ultimately, it's about INERTIA and not about force.
That said, I've broken a couple of these pullers using this technique so maybe my method is wrong?
I'm sure Dogleg will fill us in with his method, maybe we can all learn something.