This is my first post on here, great forum by the way.
I have been reloading for nearly a year now and the other day I was having problems getting primers to seat properly. I was using Federal 210 primers and a RCBS rockchucher press with the priming arm. Some of the primers would seat normally while others would not, even with a good amount of force from the press.
I had just purchused the primers and was wondering if they was something haywire with them or something I was doing wrong? I had measured some of the primer diameters that were not going in and didn't see much difference between another brand I had around. It seemed like the primers were too large to fit, but from measuring them they seemed alright. My reloading set up isn't here or I would make sure the diameters were consistent and it wasn't a primer problem.
The cases I was priming were .308 win and .22-250 and I made sure the primer pockets were clean. Could this be caused by the priming arm on the press or is it possible to get primers which are not consistent (which I've never seen or heard of)?
This could be something simple I'm overlooking but I've primed many other cases the same way and never had a problem. Thanks for the help guys.
I have been reloading for nearly a year now and the other day I was having problems getting primers to seat properly. I was using Federal 210 primers and a RCBS rockchucher press with the priming arm. Some of the primers would seat normally while others would not, even with a good amount of force from the press.
I had just purchused the primers and was wondering if they was something haywire with them or something I was doing wrong? I had measured some of the primer diameters that were not going in and didn't see much difference between another brand I had around. It seemed like the primers were too large to fit, but from measuring them they seemed alright. My reloading set up isn't here or I would make sure the diameters were consistent and it wasn't a primer problem.
The cases I was priming were .308 win and .22-250 and I made sure the primer pockets were clean. Could this be caused by the priming arm on the press or is it possible to get primers which are not consistent (which I've never seen or heard of)?
This could be something simple I'm overlooking but I've primed many other cases the same way and never had a problem. Thanks for the help guys.