Not all is BUGgy

The 2014 BUG “Bring-Uh-Gun” IDPA Championship Match was a big part of my weekend, duh.
However, that is not the only thing a-goin on ’round here…
A while back, I ordered some used brass from a guy I have gotten quite a bit of brass from. The brass from him has always been in really good shape and he is generous with extras to ensure his customers get the quantity they are expecting. My order of 10mm was no different. Unfortunately, he has not responded to several emails, so I suppose I need to shop elsewhere for brass now 🙁
I got a bit of a deal on this batch because he knew that it was partly small primer and partly large primer 10mm Auto and discounted it accordingly. In the last few days, I’ve been running batches of this brass through the tumbler. When I started looking at it and sorting it, I expected a relatively small percentage to be small primer. Turns out to be about half of it.
This brass also had the usual bit of mis-sorted stuff, a few 40S&W and 357 SIG, a handful of 38 Special and a couple of 223. Sadly, nothing exotic 🙂
I had gathered about box worth of rejected 45 Auto loads, mostly primer issues. I spent a bit of time pulling those rounds and reloading what I could. Mostly, they were straight forward crunched or upside down primers that just needed to be removed and redone. I don’t depend only on my safety glasses and turn my head away when I deprime cases with live primers. Afterall, they are enclosed in the resizing die when the pin hits the primer. I should probably use my universal deprimer, which does not have a tight fit over the case, but it is also really easy to not have the case aligned properly and break the pin. It’s on it’s third pin now. Plus, there is no safe way, for the weapon or user, to fire them in a gun, so I just grit my teeth and do it with the press. I have never ever had a primer go off in the press, so it must be ok 🙂
Anyway, I had a few of these 45’s for which the original primer just didn’t seat all the way in. Even with a second attempt, they began to distort without seating any deeper. I retried a couple of them and they still wouldn’t seat, so I just tossed them in the trash. It finally occurred to me to check one them closely and this is what it looked like.
The original primer cup had split when it was pressed out and only part of the primer came free. There was a ring left in the pocket blocking the new primer from fully seating.

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