I have several 45 ACP pieces of brass. Some were gathered at the range as I picked up mine.
Question: Is there a tool or what is the fool-proof way of identifying/ seperating the SPP from the LPP?
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I have several 45 ACP pieces of brass. Some were gathered at the range as I picked up mine.
Question: Is there a tool or what is the fool-proof way of identifying/ seperating the SPP from the LPP?
mark-1 eyeball.
or primer pocket uniforming tool.
Find a pin ( dowel pin, rod stock or even a gage pin) that will drop in large pockets but is bigger than the small pockets. Set it in a small handle and your good to go. SInce your only sorting for the primer size not oversized tool can be pretty broad in size.
Thanks for your input. I was hoping to be able to seperate the cases prior to depriming.
My LnL comes to an abrupt stop when I encounter a small primer 45 ACP case when reloading for others using their cases - sometimes S&B brass brings everything to a quick stop as well.;) Just don't force the issue on a progressive and all will be well - same advice for a single stage.
I'd like to kick whoever decided to start mixing the primer types. I eyeball mine prior to filling the loading bins....and inevitably get a press stopping event when another finds its way in. It takes me twice as long but I try to eyeball the base each time before I feed the new case in now.
I understand you pain... You would have to go back a long way in time to find that person to kick ( 50 years or more ). seems someone is always coming up with some bright idea. Sorting seems to be the answer. I sort all my 45acp but I hand prime and I can tell you my sorting is way less than 100% accurate. I am glad I do not prime on the press any more.
I've found that a Dillon press is a good sorter of spp .45 ACP. Nothing brings it to a screeching halt like trying to seat a big primer in a little hole! http://castboolits.gunloads.com/webk...59455/imagegif
David
Funny how the older my eyes get, the smaller the difference between primers are. ;)
Learn which HS to pay particular attention to as you deprime. I deprime 45 ACP with a LEE universal tool and separate them before any other process. I also have a pin in a hole on the edge of the bench that rejects small pockets if in doubt. It's slower than an automatic press, but decreases the frustration :x and can save press problems later.
May I suggest you take a look at the Frankfort Arsenal hand deprimer. It takes the operation out of the press entirely, doesn't care if it's large or small primer, doesn't use a shell holder and when you hold it at the right angle catches 100% of the spent primers. For $35.00 I thought mine was a good buy.
Frankfort Arsenal hand deprimer
No offence Sasquatch-1, but that's another case where age causes a different insite.
Twice I upended it and dumped primers on the carpet.
True, it's self contained and does the job, but the grip required caused arthritis pain after only 80 military 5.56 cases. It now has a perminate home in the drawer with all the other useless purchases of the last 54 years.
I use the RCBS large primer swaging spud as a gauge. Won't fit>>>>>SMALL PRIMER POCKET!!!
I set up the Loadmaster with the 45ACP dies and a small primer feed. Then I use the collator to fill the case feeder tubes and just pump the lever.
The small primer brass get a primer installed, the large primer brass the small primer stays on the pin and an empty primer pocket.
It's easy to sort when the decision is does it have a primer or not.
When I get enough of the large primer brass, then I'll run those the same way, just with the large primer set up....
I can swap the primer size in 30 seconds or so, the Loadmaster is fast to do caliber changes.