Think again!
. . or even better; check these two web pages out.
http://riflemansjournal.blogspot.com...mer-study.html
http://riflemansjournal.blogspot.com...mer-study.html
You are welcome.
Think again!
. . or even better; check these two web pages out.
http://riflemansjournal.blogspot.com...mer-study.html
http://riflemansjournal.blogspot.com...mer-study.html
You are welcome.
I'd rather be lucky than good, but I'd rather KNOW I'm good than HOPE to get lucky.
Don't forget the cup thickness diffrence in small rifle between standard and magnum as well as the brisance.
https://forum.capitalcitygunforum.co...etween-primers
So what is a soft primer in the above article?
I honestly don't know. A number of them listed I have never even heard of before.. I get from general reading on the web that, "military" primers made by CCI are the hardest and based on my personal observation this seems to be true. As I understand; CCI commercial is next, followed by Wolf. In a pinch, I have loaded for the Ar and the M1A using standard Winchester primers large and small. While I have never experienced a slam fire with them, the the dent left in the primer after firing the preceding round is noticeably more significant that any of the primers I mentioned above.
I'd rather be lucky than good, but I'd rather KNOW I'm good than HOPE to get lucky.
I've always heard Winchesters were middle-of-the-road for hardness and Federal were the softest. A lot of "old timers" would talk about lowering the mainspring on their competition guns so they "would only set off Federal primers."
I'm sure there's a bunch of information out there on the topic, but I will leave that for others to report back on!
Highpower shooters using the AR platform are using Rem 7-1/2 and CCi and Wolf magnums. Federals tend to pierce with hot loads. The M1A shooters are using Win LR, CCI Mil, and Fed 210M. The Longrange bolt gun shooters are using Wolf and Fed 210M in that order. The Wolf seem to get a smaller deviation shot to shot.
The older WinSR (silver) are harder than the newer (brass colored) ones. If you aren't shooting hot loads even the Fed205M primers are OK.
found this as well.
http://www.shootingtimes.com/ammo/am...motaip_200909/
i thought the part about the delayed ignition at starting loads as well as using pistol primers for 22 hornet was interesting in that article.
this is some pressure trace data from another forum i frequent, it is a bit long, but interesting.
Originally Posted by jwtharpeOriginally Posted by jwtharpe
Last edited by mapper; May 8th, 2016 at 09:30 PM.