Post pictures of Old Equipment and supplies that you find/have:
I was given these
.99˘ for 100 primers
and a Mec 600 JR (in sad shape, I'm not saying the Mec is old )
Post pictures of Old Equipment and supplies that you find/have:
I was given these
.99˘ for 100 primers
and a Mec 600 JR (in sad shape, I'm not saying the Mec is old )
Star inline Cal 30/06 Circa 1930's
Last edited by Pressman; 04-08-2019 at 09:02 PM.
NRA Endowment Member
International Ammunition Association
New York, the Empire State Where Empires were Won and Lost
Sal, I need one of those. Can you get some better pictures?
Found these two Ideal tong tools at the Denver Gun Show.
The one on the left is the rare No. 2 tool, used to load a round ball into the S&W .38-44 cartridge. The mould casts the round ball, and the old style repriming station is on the end of the mould instead of along the handle. There is a sizing station on the handle, with hole and punch, although it should seat the cast ball without need of sizing. A .357 Magnum shell fits in the chamber fine; maybe I'll try some round ball plinking loads sometime.
The one on the right is the Ideal Shell Indentor. The tiny stud on the left handle put four stab crimps (one at a time) on the necks of black powder shells even with the boolit base, so it wouldn't back into the shell when a small charge of smokeless was used instead of a full case of black. It originally came with an ancillary wood-handled Fluted Cap Extractor that would push past the stab crimps to remove the primer, whereas a standard depriming punch would iron out the crimps in short order.
I don't know how those things were used. You couldn't hammer on the wood handle without splitting it, and the other push decappers, like the Marlin/Ballard and Ideal hand tools, don't have any place to hammer on either. Pushing a dead primer out by hand is something I have tried repeatedly, without success. Maybe the old primers were thinner, softer and a looser fit in the old folded or balloon head cases.
I think I have a specimen of every Ideal nutcracker cartridge loading tool except for the rare No. 7, which loaded only the .44-40 Game Getter shot cartridge. One of these days, maybe...
Dave, Tom had a No 7 on his table in Denver, did you get to handle it?
Ken,
I looked at it, but didn’t pick it up. So much Good Stuff at that show that it boggled the mind. I’m still boggled, as a matter of fact.
Tom Q’s display was amazing, all right, and deservedly won an award. But the other Tom’s display of Ideal tong tools, as new in the boxes, and only made during the MFA interregnum, showed a level of focus that I wouldn’t have believed possible.
For anybody that likes antique/vintage guns and accessories, the Denver show will spoil you rotten for run-of-the-mill “normal” gun shows. Like going back to your 1/8 oz per ton placer claim after a couple days at The Mother Lode. Lots of affordable Little Stuff (if you look carefully) along with the out-of-reach museum pieces to gawk at.
found this in my stuff "Vintage tumico cs-23 tubular tube micrometer 2-3"
What was it orriginally used for and is there a reloading use for it?
That is an excellent case length gauge, and a nice piece of history.
All my equipment is old! But then so am I so it equals out!
Long, Wide, Deep, and Without Hesitation!
Pressman How would I use it? the gauge reads 0 when the jaws are still several inches apart.
IF the jaws are tight against the wood, it reads 0
When it reads 0, it is at 2 inches. You would need to measure a shell or case or loaded round that had a finished length between 2 and 3 inches.
Let's take 308 for example. Trimmed case length of 2.015 inches. So you could trim and when your micrometer read .015, you would have your 2.015 inches as a trimmed case length.
Then a loaded 308 round with a overall length of 2.800 inches, you could set your micrometer at .800 and load your round and seat your bullet and once seated at 2.800 you could check it with your micrometer.
Hope that helps.
Old jones #8 cast iron lead melting pot.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Happiness is a warm .45
FREE! Not sure how old but I would like to find a spp ram for it. Make it my dedicated primer seater. The ram is my choice of primer seating offline. I may try to “restore” it but most likely just clean and lubricate it up good. Not as handy as lots of you guys on here. Afraid if I take it apart it would be a nutcracker when I’m done. But then again it was free. Also thought it may work well mounted upside down as a push thru boolit sizer.
Attachment 256788
I love that style press. I learned to reload on one many years ago from a guy who was old enough to be my grandfather.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Happiness is a warm .45
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |