Maybe I am interpreting your question wrong.
What should matter is that when the firing pin moves forward and impacts the primer that is has enough protrusion to hit the primer but not over Pentwater. Primer location is determined partially by seating depth and partially by case location in the chamber off the shoulder and body
Maybe I am interpreting your question wrong.
What should matter is that when the firing pin moves forward and impacts the primer that is has enough protrusion to hit the primer but not over Pentwater. Primer location is determined partially by seating depth and partially by case location in the chamber off the shoulder and body
The distance the FP travels is important because if it doesn't build up enough momentum it will cause light strikes. The FP tip must remain in the FP channel when retracted or it will progressively sharpen the tip which will cause primer piercing and a fried FP tip.