thorswhisper
New member
Has anyone here ever made their own bench priming tool? Preferably one that has the capacity to adjust the depth and that has better feel?
why would you want to adjust seating depth ?
1) seat to the bottom of the pocket
2) add a small crush in place about .002
not seated to the bottom means the firing pin must do that job
leading to poor ignition consistency.
All done by feel or you can spring for this bench mounted priming tool.
http://www.primalrights.com/store/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=134
All done by feel or you can spring for this bench mounted priming tool.
http://www.primalrights.com/store/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=134
i beleive k m has the fioxtures to do that '.has anyone here ever made their own bench priming tool? Preferably one that has the capacity to adjust the depth and that has better feel?
I had considered modifying a Forster bench unit, but it's so clumsy....
i did not realize the great sense of humor you have.
As long as the primers are bottomed, they will ignite. A lot of people seem to place a lot of relevance on feel. How does one measure feel? Just askin for a friend
Pete
"Feel", better termed "tactile judgement", is an acquired skill. What it, "has to do with it", is uniformly "seating" the anvil, thus, uniform ignition. RG
squesse your primer seater with your hand not your thumb.a Lee Priming Tool years ago. Burned my left thumb quite badly. I didn't go by the directions so it was my fault, I put too many primers in the holder. The Lee does not have a fence to prevent a spark from igniting the primers waiting to be seated. I replaced it with 2 RCBS seaters that do have a fence.
Pete
and fingers.squesse your primer seater with your hand not your thumb.