View Full Version : Lee Loader to the Rescue
musketjon
05-22-2015, 02:12
Last night I was priming some SL 43 brass for an upcoming match. I was having one helluva time trying to get the primers seated with my Lee Auto Prime. Try as I may, all the primers were high. '' What am I gonna' do now? '' thinks me. In an '' Aha'' moment I remembered my old Lee Loader taking up space in my loading shelf. Soooo, I took it down, wiped the dust and cob webs off of it, opened it up and took out the repriming rod. I put it in the first case, set it on the anvil of my vise and gave it a few whacks with a plastic hammer. '' Voila''!!! The primer was now seated flush with the case head. I did this for the remaining 49 rounds and now all is good. Just thought I'd pass this along to everyone in case you ever find yourself in a similar situation. Good thing I never got rid of that Lee Loader.
Jon
While Lee made a fine primer seating device (round primer tray) they have up dated it with a new design to a square primer tray. It seems to me that they have shortened the handle area which is not a improvement in my mind. They also make a ergonomic one but it's more money. The new design has a plastic top cover which I consider a bit too thin as it can be displaced by a out of place primer. I had to buy the new design as my older one with the round primer tray wore out. I'd rather have the old design IMHO.
Correct me if I'm wrong and I've been corrected so many times there are red pen marks over 99.9% of my body.....those hand held Lee primers are not safe to use. Primers, according to what I have read, sometimes detonate when squeezed by those hand held devices.
I'm with joem on the Lee handheld primer seater. Prefer my older, round one. The newer square one preps the next primer for loading in such a way that if you put the loader down a primer falls out. Not everyone wants to load all their primers at once. Also, even on the old tool sometimes a primer pocket is tight and the primer sits proud. Rather than accelerating arthritis by squeezing the tar out of the tool, I follow up with the tight ones by further seating on my RCBS Rockchucker until flush. Never had a primer go while in the handheld tool. Although, I suspect it is possible. In the litigious world of today, if it were a danger, I think they would quickly be removed from the Lee inventory of products available.
I did have a primer go off in my older Lee hand primer tool. I was priming some odd ball cases for a friend with his Russian (crap) primers. I had just touched the primer arm and put very little pressure on it. A couple of my fingers got scorched and a small blister is all I had. I will not use Russian primers anymore.
Hecklerusp45
06-03-2015, 09:13
It can happen, and did happen to me one time. I am in the habit of keeping it pointed away from me when I squeeze the handle, so no harm done.
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