dearslayer
Regular
- Location
- On The Edge
So I recently purchased some used brass and I noticed some cases have unfired primers. Should these be removed and re primed or are they still good to use??
Process the brass as usual. You do not need to advise the fire department you are removing a live primer.
In Richard Lee's 'Modern Reloading' manual, Lee related a story about someone who'd processed a (live) primed case 'as usual', just as one would a fired case.
The primer ended up in the guy's leg.
A reloader attempting to drive out a live primer with a Lee Loader
decapper did it on his lap. The primer exploded and entered his leg
to the bone. Curiosity prompted me to chronograph the velocity of
a primer exiting the primer pocket. It checked an amazing 1412
fps! That's faster than a 22 rim fire and most handguns. It has to be
the world's shortest gun as a primer pocket is only slightly more
than an eighth of an inch deep.
I'm probably too dangerous and stupid to reload but yet here I am.
Everyone is wearing their safety glasses, right?
I have decapped a few hundred primers in my rock chucker with a lee universal decapping die
and no issues at all with same speed/pressure as used primers
I, too, chronographed a primer. It was less than 500 fps. I wonder if your high reading was gases, or some kind of error? Maybe I will repeat my tests.




























