Guess who was pres when I bought these? 8)https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...bea421b22c.jpg
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Guess who was pres when I bought these? 8)https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...bea421b22c.jpg
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Jimmy Carter or Ronald Reagan? Any way, that seems to ring a bell for when the Plastic Strip primers started showing up in Gun Magazine ads. I always liked the older CCI Primer trays that had 10 primers in a row and touching as they took up far less space in storage and on the reloading bench. Guess they were "Redesigned" to reduce the chance of primer to primer ignition.
They're still sold that way, so it could have been any number of presidents.........
Find out what year RCBS came out with the Pro 2000. That should give you an idea. I don't think, it was the 70's or 80's. I think it was the mid-late 90's.
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Redesigned to make more money off of the reloader. Now he has to pay a separate tool to be able to use the strips as well as paying for the strips also. I don't see strip primers as a real benefit but I am sure there are others who do and I say more power to them. james
Hint: I dont have a machine that uses these! They were all that was available to purchase for a time around here.
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Obama
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Really the answer to a problem that didn't exist. I loaded many thousands of primers, by hand, on the old Spartan, before buying a set of primer tubes (and later a used RCBS bench mounted machine) You just have to remember that you shouldn't pickup the primers with the same hand you are eating Cheetos with!
I think the RCBS primer strips came out in 1994. Before the 2000 came out. I remember the strip loading tray and both a bench mounted & press mounted priming tool. Also CCI came out with primers already strip loaded. Different colors for each type of primers. You could also buy the strips separately.
When the 2000 1st came out it was strip loaded primer feed only. Later they came out with conversion to feed TUBES.
I had buddy that bought a 2000 with the strip feed. 25 primers to the strip. Said it was a real pain to have that strip sticking out of the side of the press, constantly stopping to add another strip. The strips would break and get shorter & shorter. I think he finally went with the tube feed conversion.
Oh no! What a shame.
I happen to LOVE APS priming. Loaded about 500 rounds just today on my Pro 2000 with the APS. I do most of my priming on my Pro 2000 auto-index press, even those that are loaded on one of the single stage presses. It is fast and reliable. Loading strips goes quickly -- even better to buy them preloaded when they are on sale.
Ironically, RCBS took one of the best attributes of the Pro 2000 -- reliable priming -- and created an Achilles heel with tube priming of the Pro Chuckers.
If you have no need for those empty APS strips, let me know your terms!
I realize that you're conveying second-hand information, but the strips don't "break and get shorter & shorter." That's just not how they work. If the APS mechanism is maladjusted, then the strips can be wrecked by driving the priming plunger through the plastic. Properly configured, set it and forget it. Otherwise, the strips go for a LONG time before the plastic fatigues. The "primer pockets" can get loose just like a brass case.
Adding another strip takes maybe 2 seconds? So 8ish seconds per 100 rounds? Worse than adding a tube of primers?
I also can't see the issue with "sticking out of the side of the press." It impedes nothing as far as working area, but it is right there where the operator can see the remaining primers.
Obama would be my guess. The “panic” had people buying everything to squirrel away in their closet vs what they needed to use. This forced others that really needed components to buy what they could use.
I was at a friends reloading business and noticed buckets of the strips and asked why he even had them? They had 4 people poking primers out of them all day, just to keep up with their Camdex reloading machines.
I have one of these hand primers from RCBS. Other than switching out the large/small primer rod and shell holder its very simple and quick to use. It lets me "feel" the primer seat in the pocket. I would think the strip method just adds steps. I just dump a box of primers, shake to flip, then start priming. Not hard and no extra parts to get lost/worn out.
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/10...d-priming-tool
redhawk
Still waiting for a answer.
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