Anybody tried these?
Where did you find them?
Thoughts on their utility in Lapua small primer 308 and 6.5 Creedmoor brass?
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I would also never use Lapua brass in rifles that throw perfectly good brass away and makes you go look for it.
I buy bulk once fired Lake City 5.56 and 7.62 brass because the cases are much cheaper and made tougher than commercial brass. And I don't cry if I loose a few of these Lake City cases.
The last rifle I bought was a Savage .308 and looked into buying some Peterson .308 match cases with small rifle primer pockets. I Googled the subject and the majority of responses said they had better results with large rifle primers.
Bottom line, the Lake City cases are more uniform than Remington and Winchester cases. And by weight sorting and with some prep work you end up with very good cases far cheaper than Lapua.
.308/7.62 - AS-IS - Lake City Only - 100 Pieces $16.00 free shipping
https://brassbombers.com/308-762-AS-IS-Lake-City-Only-100-Pieces-7LC-ASP10.htm
Lapua Reloading Brass 308 Winchester Palma Small Primer Pocket Box of 100 $80.99 plus shipping
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1...nchester-palma-small-primer-pocket-box-of-100
Remington ran Lake City Army Ammunition Plant from 1941 until 1985 and used their 7 1/2 and 9 1/2 primers during that time in 7.62 and 5.56 ammunition.
In 2001 ATK took over production at Lake City and decided to use primers with thicker cups and shorter anvils. I would ask what type primer is used in Canadian military ammunition. It seems to be a solution to a problem that doesn't exist and charge the government more to make ammunition.
Both the M14 and M16 rifles had their firing pins lightened during initial development testing to prevent slam fires. Meaning after all these years why do we need "special" primers.
I use Remington primers in my M1 Garand and AR15 rifles and never had any problems. The biggest chance of a slam fire is when loading a single round in the M14 and AR15 rifles without the magazine in the rifle to slow down bolt velocity. And this is why the firing pins were lightened after initial field testing to prevent these type slam fires.
If you want extra peace of mind then go ahead and buy these primers, but many wars were fought without them and I do not see any need for them now.
New Federal Gold Medal Match Primers for ARs
http://bulletin.accurateshooter.com/2011/09/new-federal-gold-medal-match-primers-for-ars/
Again... really?
Look, people want a safer alternative when loading for their ARs. Fact is that with the primers that are available now folks are much more protected against slamfires that have occurred using 7 1/2 and 9 1/2 primers; period.
I do not see why every time primers for ARs come up you feel the need to post the same few paragraphs saying the same thing over and over again. Look, things improve, things get better and things undergo development for their specific purpose.
If you don't want to use them that's fine, but please stop dissuading shooters from taking a safer course when reloading for their ARs.
My question was about using these primers to load small rifle primer Lapua 308 and 6.5 Creedmoor brass for my AI/AT bolt rifle. I don't reload for my AR15, bulk ammo is cheaper than my time. I guess I should have been more detailed in my questions.
thanks!
Don't mind bigped, he just keeps copy/pasting the same stuff that's usually unrelated to the OP's question.
Anybody tried these?
Where did you find them?
Thoughts on their utility in Lapua small primer 308 and 6.5 Creedmoor brass?
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