The h48 is good but the way you do it isnt optimal. If you put a paper disk between the anvil and the powder and drop the shellak you will get much much better results. Instead of shellack, use a 50/50 mix of acetone and duco cement. Or dillute a very amount of smokeless powder (quarter teaspoon) in acetone overnight. Dilute it more to obtain a liquid before applying. Apply over the disc and press in anvil.
I watch this process and suddenly it all makes sense. What I mean is a week ago I found a little cubbyhole outdoors place and I bought a box of large rifle primers the most sacred and coveted of the primers in my area. I paid with tax $116 for 1000 large rifle Magnum primers and I think the shop owner with whom I paid this amount of money to. Just over three times almost four times what I paid 2 years ago for primers by the thousand. Again I say with all honesty I thanked this man. Given the time and labor to reload each one of these primers $109 doesn't seem so terrible however in a pinch I could definitely see myself using these and was getting very close to finding myself in a pinch
Your welcome! It is good to know about but the time to get reliability up and reload a meaningful amount is not worth it unless you have a bunch of free time to tinker. But it was fun to learn about and make things explode.
Good info thanks for posting. Where by a stroke of dumb luck or extreme intelligence I purchased large quantities of primers during the Trump administration when they were cheap and plentiful.
Yeah I have an uncle that has around 40K primers... unfortunately I ham young and didn't have any first hand experience through an ammo shortage. Next time I will be ready.
I recently found 2K small pistol and 1K small pistol Magnum primers I'd had sine before the First Great Panic in 2008..also about 8 lbs of .357 mag bass andvthe sanein 9mm nickel plated brass...Christmas in April...I'm good with all others...
YES! It is horrible. Two years ago I bought 2K Remington small rifle primers for $40+tax. Now they go for $100 per thousand on the local classifieds... :/
Important note to add about H-48. It's corrosive. Essentially it's the same compound that is used in the corrosive boxer primed ammo from comm-block countries. Be sure to clean your gun after you fire them because it will begin to degrade the barrel over time.
@@victormiranda9163 nope not with corrosive primers. You need to dissolve the salts with soap and water. Then wipe down and oil. Avoid using these in semi auto blow back or especially gas operated. Bolt guns, breach loaders are not a problem because the gases stay in the barrel.
@@victormiranda9163 If you're using corrosive primers, you need to remove the salts before you put the oil on. So a cleaner like Hoppes or something to clean out the barrel, then very light coat of oil.
I made this video a while back so I don't remember 100% what I was referring to, but here is a link to the 3D model tray part: www.thingiverse.com/thing:5237705
🇦🇺😎👍Hey mate primers down here are between $650/$1000 per 5000 at the moment if you can get them. 3 years ago on special Winchester ones were as low as $218/5000. Bit of a difference hey. Great video
As time has gone on have you been reduced to using these regularly? And if so or if you have been experimenting with them. Basically have you been running loads through a chronograph? And if so how is the consistency? Plus how close has your results been to the data in manuals? How can I put this without getting you into trouble as in your dont try this at home disclaimer. Do they appear to run on the hot or cold side of things? Have you just used these in a pistol or have you run them through a rifle? Somebody in another post commented on you would be a good nabor to have in a SHTF situation. If we were on good speaking terms I agree.
Honestly I heard about reloading primers when it got real hard to find primers so I gave this a shot. But I didn't put too much effort into fine tuning them and getting the reliability to be super solid. With work I could see the H48 compound being just as good as commercial primers minus the fact that they are corrosive. The reason I didn't work on it more is because I was able to find primers and time is one of my biggest things I try to reduce when reloading because I am super busy (kids, work, life, etc). I with minimal effort I got the reliability to about 95%, which is horrible for primers. But there were a lot of things I could have improved, but I just never got around to it. The left over H48 compound I mixed up I ended up just putting it on a rock in the garden and throwing another rock at it and then laughing at the explosion.
No problem! Honestly unless you have a lot of time it is usually just best to buy them. BUT if you do want to try it a great way to start is to get prime all in a kit.
H46 is not gun powder. Gun powder is nitrocellulose, black powder is potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal. So H46 is actually pretty close to black powder.
I am not sure what makes those go bang, but the small snaps that I played with as a kid had small rocks in them that were coated with some sort of explosive. Whatever was on them would probably work, but I am not sure what it is made of.
if by flash powder I was wondering if the powder you use to prime a flintlock pan, shouldn't that work? in fact in the flintlock the flash seems to have to travel farther, whereas in a centerfire cartridges it's a straight unobstructed shot. good question I hope someone with information can address it!
That is a good question. I may make a video on this one day. I am not sure a striker would set it off. It would also need to be able to work with the alcohol/shellac to form it into a solid disk so the powder doesn't escape the primer when loaded in a cartridge.
Did the H48 method with prime all before I was able to find some cci. Got a few hundred 9mm that I don't even wanna shoot cause the stuff is so nasty lol. Coats the barrel and action orange and it stinks. I def wouldn't use them in an AR. That would be a royal PITA to clean
Yeah, it is no fun. I don't re-load my primers, but if crap hit the fan and I had powder and projectiles and no primers then I would. But next time primers are cheep and available (may be a while) I am going to stock up like crazy.
I have heard a lone primer in a pistol brass as demonstrated. They are about as loud as 9mm cartridges being fired. I would not use the first two methods. The third method, it wasn't as loud as a real primer, but would probably do the job. Production of his priming chemical, that sounds iffy. As in if you get caught, or if your house catches fire...
Making the compound is 100% legal. There are laws regarding transportation and such so don't be stupid. Also I never store or make more then few hundred primers worth of the stuff in a sealed container in 100 primers worth baggies. I have also fired just a regular primer and smashed some and they are not as loud as a 9mm, although they are quite nosy.
@@TheLarkinsLair My last comment on the subject, I promise. Legal? Making primer material may sound like manufacturing explosive materials, and look at the first part of "18 U.S. Code § 842 (a) It shall be unlawful for any person- (1) to engage in the business of ... manufacturing, ... explosive materials without a license issued under this chapter" Now you may not be in business doing this, but do you want to hire a lawyer to prove that to the feds? Are these the days you want to be advertising making primer materials on youtube? UA-cam? Are you getting any money from your channel, that's a business. I'm just an old man offering advice for free. I hate to see any pro 2A people in trouble.
I never got around to testing these with live rounds, but I did put powder in the casing to see if it would ignite and it did without any issues for most of the primers.
I noticed solvents in your reloading room. I heard they are not good for reloading components and even the vapor alone can spoil them. I did the same thing and havnt had any problems but moved all household solvents outside to be safe.
Yeah, some of those were used for this video. But I don't typically leave a bunch of solvents lying around. Lots of fancy big shot UA-camrs have their dedicated filming spaces, not me. The crap lying around my garage varies from video to video because I use my garage for all sorts of things. Thanks for watching!
I honestly haven't reloaded thousands to see if that is the case. However in the creation of this video and some playing around I did around 200 and never ran into primers falling out. Not saying they can't, just saying I didn't have that issue. But at the end of the day it is far easier to just buy primers especially since prices have finally come down.
When I was a kid in the 70’s you could get good matches “Ohio Blue Tip “ The Bic disposable lighters came along and the quality of matches went down hill Sad days in America when people are trying to reload primers. LoL 😢😢😢
It is corrosive, and no it isn't prime all, although I would recommend prime all rather then souring everything separately especially if you just want to give it a try.
Haha, thanks sometimes I get in the middle of a video and have a brain fart on what the heck a punch, gun part, die, etc. are called and just call it "this thing." Then I am too lazy to go re-film it once I am done and realize what it is called. Thanks for saying what it actually is!
@@TheLarkinsLair I really appreciate your idea of using this style punch for compacting/shaping during the application of the stabilizing solution, genius!
Why are you using cap gun caps and strike anywhere matches as an ignition source when you can actually buy the same product used by primer manufacturers? In fact there is an entire repriming kit that helps you reprime spent primers.
lol @ me watching this after throwing away a quart size bag of spent primers I kept for over six years because I was convinced there was a use for them.
Haha! Honestly this is shtf stuff. Not so much a practicality unless you have ample time on your hands, or you genuinely can't find primers. I honestly just stick my spent primers in a tub with my brass that is too shot to re-load and then take them to a recycler. Primers are made of brass to avoid galvanic corrosion to the casing. Even though they are dirty, they are still brass.
Yeah, that is what I figure. With time I am sure I could get 95+% functionality, but I would rather just give up my right leg, first born, and an eye to pay for primers in todays costs.
100% I still have yet to get the process down and time is $$ I would rather spend the time with my family and pay the crazy prices for commercial primers. But hey, if the world ends then I have enough material to reload 70K primers. Now just need to find powder.
Okay, this is part of the problem, target pistol folks cornering the market on small pistol primers, race gun stuff, etc. competition. Now, casual recreational shooters are shit out of luck, no factory ammo, no primers and panic buying and stockpiling. I'm guilty myself since I have maybe 12k assorted on hand which is actually a lifetime supply for most of us, and I have sold a few boxes for 3X what I paid for them. One thing that seems accurate is that magnum primers are just as effective, as a substitute, if that's all you have. Maybe not benchrest quality, but better than shaving match heads. PS I have some matches, I don't know what they are called, maybe they are the strike anywhere type mentioned several times. These are wood, about 3 " long and half of it has an orange compound with a purple tip, not quite the size of the exposed portion of a 22 rimfire. If this has already been covered and they are also scarce, I will shut up. ridiculous
The h48 is good but the way you do it isnt optimal. If you put a paper disk between the anvil and the powder and drop the shellak you will get much much better results. Instead of shellack, use a 50/50 mix of acetone and duco cement. Or dillute a very amount of smokeless powder (quarter teaspoon) in acetone overnight. Dilute it more to obtain a liquid before applying. Apply over the disc and press in anvil.
Thanks for the tips!
But you can make better AND non corrosive mixes...some even lead free...
@@alexm2833Recipe?
How do y'all make paper disks the right size for a primer?
I watch this process and suddenly it all makes sense. What I mean is a week ago I found a little cubbyhole outdoors place and I bought a box of large rifle primers the most sacred and coveted of the primers in my area. I paid with tax $116 for 1000 large rifle Magnum primers and I think the shop owner with whom I paid this amount of money to. Just over three times almost four times what I paid 2 years ago for primers by the thousand. Again I say with all honesty I thanked this man. Given the time and labor to reload each one of these primers $109 doesn't seem so terrible however in a pinch I could definitely see myself using these and was getting very close to finding myself in a pinch
Yeah, these work, but if you can find them it is well worth it just due to the time required to re-load primers.
This is the first I have learned that primers can be reloaded. Fantastic, very interesting, I plan on trying it soon. Thanks for the3 video.
Your welcome! It is good to know about but the time to get reliability up and reload a meaningful amount is not worth it unless you have a bunch of free time to tinker. But it was fun to learn about and make things explode.
This is true SHTF material.
Good info thanks for posting. Where by a stroke of dumb luck or extreme intelligence I purchased large quantities of primers during the Trump administration when they were cheap and plentiful.
Yeah I have an uncle that has around 40K primers... unfortunately I ham young and didn't have any first hand experience through an ammo shortage. Next time I will be ready.
I recently found 2K small pistol and 1K small pistol Magnum primers I'd had sine before the First Great Panic in 2008..also about 8 lbs of .357 mag bass andvthe sanein 9mm nickel plated brass...Christmas in April...I'm good with all others...
Dammit man, you are wasting time. What in the hell is your favorite method.
It’s so sad that it has come to this. Ridiculous honestly. Thanks for the video.
YES! It is horrible. Two years ago I bought 2K Remington small rifle primers for $40+tax. Now they go for $100 per thousand on the local classifieds... :/
Strike-anywhere matches have become much harder to find. Great video !
Yeah they are expensive when you do find them. Thanks for watching!
Important note to add about H-48. It's corrosive. Essentially it's the same compound that is used in the corrosive boxer primed ammo from comm-block countries. Be sure to clean your gun after you fire them because it will begin to degrade the barrel over time.
Yes very true, you NEED to clean your gun ASAP after shooting them because it will eat up the barrel pretty bad if you don't.
clean with? I usually oil the bore... is that enough?
@@victormiranda9163 nope not with corrosive primers. You need to dissolve the salts with soap and water. Then wipe down and oil. Avoid using these in semi auto blow back or especially gas operated. Bolt guns, breach loaders are not a problem because the gases stay in the barrel.
@@victormiranda9163 If you're using corrosive primers, you need to remove the salts before you put the oil on. So a cleaner like Hoppes or something to clean out the barrel, then very light coat of oil.
@@alexm2833 if you are in a hurry could you use windex? I noticed when knife makers etch with acid they use windex to neutralize it.
Cool video. reloading is a good lone past time activity
This has to be the craziest thing I have ever seen anybody do when it comes to reloading
You should check out some more of my videos.
ua-cam.com/video/es1YgL3izWYf/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/gdKKNN-GPyc/v-deo.html
I remember when 1000 primers were $20...😥😥
Yeah... me too. It wasn't even that log ago I picked up a brick of Remington LR primers in January of 2020 for $20.
14.95 is the cheapest I ever bought in the late 70's
did you make a new primer tray
I made this video a while back so I don't remember 100% what I was referring to, but here is a link to the 3D model tray part: www.thingiverse.com/thing:5237705
@@TheLarkinsLair thank you
A better way to prepare your match heads is to dampen them with acetone or ever clear and mash them up then let dry after putting it in the primers
That is a good idea.
I am using EPH 20, 26 with titanium to the sparks, seems to be a powerfull primer.
Sounds like that would work.
there is a company called sharp shooters that offers a kit called Prime All. This is for any primer and black powder caps.
That is true, it is the easier way to go rather then going to firework websites.
🇦🇺😎👍Hey mate primers down here are between $650/$1000 per 5000 at the moment if you can get them. 3 years ago on special Winchester ones were as low as $218/5000. Bit of a difference hey. Great video
Yeah, primers are still stupid expensive.... :/ But at least we can get them now.
🇦🇺😎👍Yep@@TheLarkinsLair
That's a roll pin punch, the round tip centers in the roll pin, can buy them at Midway or Brownells
As time has gone on have you been reduced to using these regularly? And if so or if you have been experimenting with them.
Basically have you been running loads through a chronograph? And if so how is the consistency? Plus how close has your results been to the data in manuals? How can I put this without getting you into trouble as in your dont try this at home disclaimer. Do they appear to run on the hot or cold side of things? Have you just used these in a pistol or have you run them through a rifle?
Somebody in another post commented on you would be a good nabor to have in a SHTF situation. If we were on good speaking terms I agree.
Honestly I heard about reloading primers when it got real hard to find primers so I gave this a shot. But I didn't put too much effort into fine tuning them and getting the reliability to be super solid. With work I could see the H48 compound being just as good as commercial primers minus the fact that they are corrosive.
The reason I didn't work on it more is because I was able to find primers and time is one of my biggest things I try to reduce when reloading because I am super busy (kids, work, life, etc).
I with minimal effort I got the reliability to about 95%, which is horrible for primers. But there were a lot of things I could have improved, but I just never got around to it. The left over H48 compound I mixed up I ended up just putting it on a rock in the garden and throwing another rock at it and then laughing at the explosion.
Thanks for the video, I would love to learn more about Primers and how to make them I have a 357 mag S &W
No problem! Honestly unless you have a lot of time it is usually just best to buy them. BUT if you do want to try it a great way to start is to get prime all in a kit.
Mewe group “Primer Reloading” come join the fun
Thanks, but what is gun powder? Black powder of nitro propellant?
H46 is not gun powder. Gun powder is nitrocellulose, black powder is potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal. So H46 is actually pretty close to black powder.
I occasionally am able to find the strike anywhere matches for fairly reasonable prices at Sportsman's Warehouse.
Yeah, they are pretty hard to find.
Do you think you could replace ground glass with diatomaceous earth? Cheap and easy to get, flour consistency, made of silica glass diatoms.
I bet you could.
The primer prices have come back down if you know where to buy them mine cost $200 out the door for a 5000 pack.
Nice, I have seen them on American Reloading for about $200, do you have any other websites/stores you can sugest?
You didn't lose anvils during the tumbles?
I have lost anvils all over the place, but I have so many I don't really care if I lose a few.
How about those little snap 'caps' we saw or used as kids..little white bags of a flash powder that popped when you threw them in the ground???
I am not sure what makes those go bang, but the small snaps that I played with as a kid had small rocks in them that were coated with some sort of explosive. Whatever was on them would probably work, but I am not sure what it is made of.
Would flash powder work? If you could stabilize it enough to be safe to work with.
if by flash powder I was wondering if the powder you use to prime a flintlock pan, shouldn't that work? in fact in the flintlock the flash seems to have to travel farther, whereas in a centerfire cartridges it's a straight unobstructed shot. good question I hope someone with information can address it!
That is a good question. I may make a video on this one day. I am not sure a striker would set it off. It would also need to be able to work with the alcohol/shellac to form it into a solid disk so the powder doesn't escape the primer when loaded in a cartridge.
That's alot of work glad I bought a hell of a lot in 2019
Yeah it is a lot of work. Not really worth it unless you pretty much runout and the apocalypse hits.
@@TheLarkinsLair I stocked up good I shouldn't have to buy any for years
Did the H48 method with prime all before I was able to find some cci. Got a few hundred 9mm that I don't even wanna shoot cause the stuff is so nasty lol. Coats the barrel and action orange and it stinks. I def wouldn't use them in an AR. That would be a royal PITA to clean
Yeah, it is no fun. I don't re-load my primers, but if crap hit the fan and I had powder and projectiles and no primers then I would. But next time primers are cheep and available (may be a while) I am going to stock up like crazy.
Do you use smokeless gunpowder or black powder in your primer.
H-48 compound. I would have showed how to make it but UA-cam frowns on stuff like that.
I have heard a lone primer in a pistol brass as demonstrated. They are about as loud as 9mm cartridges being fired. I would not use the first two methods. The third method, it wasn't as loud as a real primer, but would probably do the job. Production of his priming chemical, that sounds iffy. As in if you get caught, or if your house catches fire...
Making the compound is 100% legal. There are laws regarding transportation and such so don't be stupid. Also I never store or make more then few hundred primers worth of the stuff in a sealed container in 100 primers worth baggies. I have also fired just a regular primer and smashed some and they are not as loud as a 9mm, although they are quite nosy.
@@TheLarkinsLair My last comment on the subject, I promise.
Legal? Making primer material may sound like manufacturing explosive materials, and look at the first part of "18 U.S. Code § 842 (a) It shall be unlawful for any person-
(1) to engage in the business of ... manufacturing, ... explosive materials without a license issued under this chapter"
Now you may not be in business doing this, but do you want to hire a lawyer to prove that to the feds? Are these the days you want to be advertising making primer materials on youtube? UA-cam? Are you getting any money from your channel, that's a business. I'm just an old man offering advice for free. I hate to see any pro 2A people in trouble.
So have you put lead on top of these and tested or are you just going off the loudness of the bang and smoke output?
I never got around to testing these with live rounds, but I did put powder in the casing to see if it would ignite and it did without any issues for most of the primers.
didn't even know this was a thing! thanks
Thanks for watching!
Is the H48 corrosive?
Yes, it is a chlorate based priming compound, as we used in WW1 ammunition.
Yes, so if you use it make sure you aren't lazy because you need to clean you gun right after you shoot.
If your reloading primers I think the matter of corrosive or not goes out the window, just keep em as clean as you can.
I noticed solvents in your reloading room. I heard they are not good for reloading components and even the vapor alone can spoil them. I did the same thing and havnt had any problems but moved all household solvents outside to be safe.
Yeah, some of those were used for this video. But I don't typically leave a bunch of solvents lying around. Lots of fancy big shot UA-camrs have their dedicated filming spaces, not me. The crap lying around my garage varies from video to video because I use my garage for all sorts of things. Thanks for watching!
Trying to reuse primer will be loose as a goose when you try to put them back into a shell.
I honestly haven't reloaded thousands to see if that is the case. However in the creation of this video and some playing around I did around 200 and never ran into primers falling out. Not saying they can't, just saying I didn't have that issue.
But at the end of the day it is far easier to just buy primers especially since prices have finally come down.
what's the orange primer holder you were using? Was that 3D printed?
Edit: Nevermind, saw you printed it. Can you post the file on thingverse?
Sure can: www.thingiverse.com/thing:5237705
@@TheLarkinsLair hey, thanks for the rapid reply and posting king.
When I was a kid in the 70’s you could get good matches “Ohio Blue Tip “
The Bic disposable lighters came along and the quality of matches went down hill
Sad days in America when people are trying to reload primers. LoL 😢😢😢
Is your compound non-corrosive and is it primal all
It is corrosive, and no it isn't prime all, although I would recommend prime all rather then souring everything separately especially if you just want to give it a try.
That is a roll pin/spring pin punch.
Haha, thanks sometimes I get in the middle of a video and have a brain fart on what the heck a punch, gun part, die, etc. are called and just call it "this thing." Then I am too lazy to go re-film it once I am done and realize what it is called. Thanks for saying what it actually is!
@@TheLarkinsLair
I really appreciate your idea of using this style punch for compacting/shaping during the application of the stabilizing solution, genius!
Why are you using cap gun caps and strike anywhere matches as an ignition source when you can actually buy the same product used by primer manufacturers? In fact there is an entire repriming kit that helps you reprime spent primers.
My understanding is that prime all compound is pretty much the same as the H48 that I make in the end.
lol @ me watching this after throwing away a quart size bag of spent primers I kept for over six years because I was convinced there was a use for them.
Haha! Honestly this is shtf stuff. Not so much a practicality unless you have ample time on your hands, or you genuinely can't find primers. I honestly just stick my spent primers in a tub with my brass that is too shot to re-load and then take them to a recycler. Primers are made of brass to avoid galvanic corrosion to the casing. Even though they are dirty, they are still brass.
13:29 😂 sounded like a cartoon dud
Well, 100% fail on first two methods is pretty enlightening. 3 and 1/2 out of 4 on the H48 mix is close enough if things were that dire.
Yeah, that is what I figure. With time I am sure I could get 95+% functionality, but I would rather just give up my right leg, first born, and an eye to pay for primers in todays costs.
Thanks for the information 👍
No problem 👍
Are you sure because there hasn't been any for months the deer going to be happy this year
Well you can always re-load them, but it is a pain.
Using the 3rd method, are the primers corrosive?
Unfortunately, yes. You have to be pretty diligent about cleaning your gun afterward.
Learned a lot here thank ypu
No problem!
These methods all make me realize I make the correct choice to just buy them. The time and money invested in this is ridiculous
Yes, if you can find them, just buy them. Much easier.
Thanks
You may want to mention the compound your using is corrosive.
Yes it is, so you got to clean your gun right away.
Is it corrosive?
Unfortunately, yes. You have got to make sure you clean your firearm after using these.
Wow awesome information thank you
Glad it was helpful!
can I order mine from Indonesia
Sure or check out American Reloading for some good primer deals.
@@TheLarkinsLair ok
is there a wa no that can be contacted
good job
Thanks
That punch is a roll pin punch..
thanks for that.
No problem!
Thanks!
You bet!
I just can't bring myself to use that much time. I need thousands of primers not a dozen or so.
100% I still have yet to get the process down and time is $$ I would rather spend the time with my family and pay the crazy prices for commercial primers. But hey, if the world ends then I have enough material to reload 70K primers. Now just need to find powder.
Okay, this is part of the problem, target pistol folks cornering the market on small pistol primers, race gun stuff, etc. competition. Now, casual recreational shooters are shit out of luck, no factory ammo, no primers and panic buying and stockpiling.
I'm guilty myself since I have maybe 12k assorted on hand which is actually a lifetime supply for most of us, and I have sold a few boxes for 3X what I paid for them. One thing that seems accurate is that magnum primers are just as effective, as a substitute, if that's all you have. Maybe not benchrest quality, but better than shaving match heads. PS I have some matches, I don't know what they are called, maybe they are the strike anywhere type mentioned several times. These are wood, about 3 " long and half of it has an orange compound with a purple tip, not quite the size of the exposed portion of a 22 rimfire. If this has already been covered and they are also scarce, I will shut up.
ridiculous
Strike anywhere matches are harder to find than primers LOL
Haha, very true.
🇦🇺😎👍Interesting content
Thanks 👍
Roll pin punch
Extremely dangerous
Transfer punch
roll pin punch
Dumb ways to die 😂
I have done much worse in my garage. Haha.
1000 are now $99.99😢😢😢😢😢
😢
First two were garbage last one was better
This is not a very smart thing to do just buy primers they are available now in 2023
Yeah, this is for an absolute oh crap moment (think zombies) or if you find yourself with absolutely nothing better to do.
Should of shown us the best methods first and skipped the lame ones...👎
Oh so you're the one stealing all the primers no wonder why nobody can find any everybody stocking up on thousands of them
Uh... yeah... Sorry.
Click Bait!
In my opinion totally asinine
It sure is a lot of work and not worth the time unless you absolutely cannot find primers anywhere on gods green earth.
This basically why theres no supply for ammo and why they arnt releasing any to us narket in 22...
Roll pin punch
Roll pin punch
Roll pin punch