Mine too, though I only use it at the range with BPCR. All others get deprimed on a press dedicated to depriming.
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Four tried and true decappers. They work, from 100+ years ago.
Ideal Lightening
Attachment 252062
Ideal No 2
Attachment 252063
FA hand decapper, the real FA, not the one from Missouri
Attachment 252064
FA as furnished with the Armory set
Attachment 252065
I use one of my old Lee Pro 1000 presses with the case tubes . Fast an really easy on your hands.
FWIW there's an Ideal tong tool set for sale on Gunbroker. Steel handles, with an almost complete set of .30-06 dies. Install a universal decapping stem in the sizer die and you'd be in business.
https://www.gunbroker.com/item/846285394
Quite a while ago I foolishly decided to start reloading 9mm by collecting a half a 5-gal bucket of once-fired brass from our club range. (Secret was to get there right after our city PD finished a range day. They never pick up their brass.)
Decapping got very tedious, so I made this field expedient case kicker for my RCBS Junior from an old hacksaw blade. THEN it went fast! Box on the left to catch the cases, bucket directly below to catch spent primers, (most of them anyway). I've since used it for a big batch of 5.56 range brass. For my normal batches of < 100 cases I use my tong tool as previously posted.
Attachment 252076Attachment 252077Attachment 252078
The FA deprimer is easier on the hand if you wrap its' handle with a Tennis Racket grip wrap or the like.
Looking at the Harvey unit, I am not sure where the primers and gunk bits go, on the FA one I have the hose attachment so it captures those unless you put the hose upside down (a bad idea)
On the Harvey, the spent primers and debris go out the top of the unit.
I put a piece of tape partially over the top to keep the newly dislodged primer from flying across the room.
I deprime over a cool-whip bowl to catch the primer and debris.
Aaah, TYVM for the info :)
The only "dirty garbage" that comes out of the bottom of the primer pocket is a few specks of carbon. Easily brushed away.
Done it this way for almost 50yrs.
How you can get crud up inside a sizing die when sizing a clean dry case is beyond me.
I've been using the same .30-06, .270, .38Spl and .45ACP for that same time period. No signs of crud or scratches in my dies.
To me the issue would be the residue getting between the press ram and the press’s ram bore as well as primers in which the anvil separates and ends up in the same area because it got into the repriming arm slot cut into the ram and then gets situated between ram and bore.
Three44s
Another vote for the Hervey deprimer.
I have one and while it isn't my main de-priming method i do find it handy in some circumstances and use it often.
That's my concern, too. And it isn't just a bit of carbon or a loose anvil. The residue from a fired primer contains ground glass, which is nothing if not abrasive.
At the same time that I invented that "case kicker" I also squeezed a bit of 5/16" thin-wall brass tubing into the primer arm slot of that RCBS Junior. Primer bits fall through it to be ejected lower down, guiding them into the collector box better than just letting them fall free. It also seems to keep the ram O.D. a little cleaner as well.
uscra112,
As usual, good ideas, thank you for the tip!
Best regards
Three44s
I too rely on a Frankford Arsenal decapper. The real Frankford Arsenal that is.
https://i.imgur.com/ELTrVXcm.jpg
Another vote for the Harvey deprimer tool. Have been using it several years and like it. The dead primers mostly fall in the empty shoe box that sits in my lap, keeping them off the floor. Can sit watching TV while depriming GI 5.56 brass. Deprimed many coffee cans of this range pickup brass that local LEO left on the ground. Love it.
https://harveydeprimer.com/
Harvey deprimer all the way!! I snap it shut over a bucket and then empty the brass in a second bucket, I actually did so much 9mm brass with it, the end of it wore to the point that it would not do 9mm anymore, he sent me a new one!
I also have a Harvey Deprimer Tool. Have used it on GI 5.56 brass with nice results, having done about a dozen coffee cans of brass.
https://harveydeprimer.com/