I am reloading Lapua brass for .223 (5.56 chamber in an AR). I am using a RCBS hand primer tool (one with round tray & uses shellholder, not the universal one).
Question I have is when I seat primers I can feel them seat and yet if want to can squeeze harder. I usually try to stop when bottoms out and squeeze slightly more for good measure. What bothers me is I use my calipers to measure seating depth and I get WIDE variation no matter how consistent I try to be. From .0005 to .008 but most do average in the .003 - .005 like I think they should. Just don't like the few that are hardly below flush to ones seating more than .005.
Am I doing this wrong? Tool not right? Or is this just way it is. Hate to check every primed case! But feel I need to and try to carefully seat further the ones that are not at least close to .003. Thanks for the help!
Question I have is when I seat primers I can feel them seat and yet if want to can squeeze harder. I usually try to stop when bottoms out and squeeze slightly more for good measure. What bothers me is I use my calipers to measure seating depth and I get WIDE variation no matter how consistent I try to be. From .0005 to .008 but most do average in the .003 - .005 like I think they should. Just don't like the few that are hardly below flush to ones seating more than .005.
Am I doing this wrong? Tool not right? Or is this just way it is. Hate to check every primed case! But feel I need to and try to carefully seat further the ones that are not at least close to .003. Thanks for the help!