I just started loading a batch with Dominion. Anyone knows how they compare with the big 3?
I would put them in around winchester for hardness.
I just started loading a batch with Dominion. Anyone knows how they compare with the big 3?
Federal, by a wide margin. Also more sensitive priming compound.
Federal primers are the only one that fire when I run over them with the wheels on my chair in the loading room.
This does not agree with what I have read.
Federal uses oversize packaging because they were early adopters of packaging they believed was going to become a new standard. When the new standard fell through they weren't going to bother changing back again.
My lee hand prime instructions state that the larger the packaging, the more likely to have a chain detonation.
This does not agree with what I have read.
Federal uses oversize packaging because they were early adopters of packaging they believed was going to become a new standard. When the new standard fell through they weren't going to bother changing back again.
Federal, by a wide margin. Also more sensitive priming compound.
Federal primers are the only one that fire when I run over them with the wheels on my chair in the loading room.
Oh my god, I keep waiting for that to happen to me the first time.
Thanks guys. Gent at my local gun store said the federals were a hard primer, I've been pretty much a CCI guy but since I swapped out the springs in my Shadow 2 I've been getting a few misfires, thinking a softer primer would help until I get a lighter firing pin spring. Glad I don't have any wheels on my chair at the reloading bench, LOL's I'll take the WSP primer back and pickup the Federals.
Well known in revolver circles that Federal primers are the easiest to ignite (turn down your strain screw and misfires happen).
Also, on a Shadow the 13 pound hammer spring with the extended (not lightened) firing pin is the reliable ticket, mine is 100% with any primer I've tried (several).