I recently bought some 45acp fired cases at gun shop. When I resized/deprimed them, the decap pin punched thru several opening the cap like a tin can. Cases were of mixed brands so I assume they were reloaded. I would like to know of anyone with similar experience. I don't wanr to be buying those primers.
primer cup question
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Usually happens to cases sitting around long enough to develop a bit of corrosion on cup and pocket. The added friction prevents spent primers from sliding out smoothly. Sometimes it's the result of a rough or sharp decapping pin. -
Cases with different head stamps can have different primers, some with Boxer primers, others with Berdan primers, expect the Berdan primed cases to cause problems, Berdan primers have different flash holes, some times 2 holes others can have 3. Then there is the latest fad, cleaning cases, in the old days I used vinegar and nothing for 15 minutes maximum for the life of the case, after cleaning in vinegar I rinsed the cases on water at least twice..
After cleaning in vinegar I did not have years to remove the primers. there is something about two unlike metals, when introduced to a corrosives liquid that starts electrolysis, I would separate the cases by head stamp then start de-priming. The ruptured cup can be removed, I have used military crimp removal tools and premier pocket unfirming tools. After that it becomes a time effect thing against cost, I would accept the lost of a few cases.
I would suggest you list the head stamps.
F. GuffeyComment
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Once i a while I run into that problem. Check that the decap pin is nicely rounder and not pointy. Next, slowly raise the ram and when it hits the flash hole, lightly raise and lower the ram a few times bumping the primer out of the pocket. Works almost every time.Comment

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