Dealing with crimped primer vs buying new brass

T28w

WKR
Joined
Dec 10, 2018
Messages
585
Looking for some advice from guys that have dealt with lake city brass .223 with crimped primers. I am making my way through 1k rounds of Hornady frontier ammo with LC brass and am about ready to load some tmks up. Would it be better to just buy new brass for the tmks or deal with the lc brass with crimped primers. Is a swagger the best option if going to reload the lc brass?
 

DaveCB

FNG
Joined
Nov 6, 2023
Messages
36
I just did about 1500 pieces of 223 brass. broke a couple decamping pins and ran the brass though the RCB swagger. trim to length and chamfer the primer pockets.
lot of work I gave $15 for the brass and a couple dollars for pins.
$300/1000 for new LC if you can find it. save a lot of work and more shooting time.
How many TMKs do you have to reload ? if your only going to load say 100 I would prep the LC
 

SW hunter

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 15, 2018
Messages
143
Location
Arizona
Dillon swager isnt the cheapest but its easy to use. Dont be bothered by the crimped brass especially if you enjoy reloading. Its another step to perfect and enjoy.
 
OP
T

T28w

WKR
Joined
Dec 10, 2018
Messages
585
Yeah probably would load about 100 at a time.
I just did about 1500 pieces of 223 brass. broke a couple decamping pins and ran the brass though the RCB swagger. trim to length and chamfer the primer pockets.
lot of work I gave $15 for the brass and a couple dollars for pins.
$300/1000 for new LC if you can find it. save a lot of work and more shooting time.
How many TMKs do you have to reload ? if your only going to load say 100 I would prep the LC
I would prob be loading 100 at a time, at most, and prob not even that often. Really just want to get a decent load established and then use the tmks for hunting. The 68gr frontier at .60ish cents a round makes shooting way easier as time is kinda limited currently And they have been plenty accurate. I’ll look at the Dillon, I’ve seen that mentioned in my looking as the best swager for the job
 

logem

FNG
Joined
Jan 18, 2023
Messages
77
Location
Santa Fe, NM
Just purchase a Hornady 390750 Primer Pocket Reamer for about $15. Chuck it in a hand drill at about 200 rpm, and go through the 1000 cases fairly quickly.

It would be silly in my opinion to buy new brass just to avoid removing the crimp.

71xHRb7diKL._AC_SL1500_.jpg
 
Joined
Jun 26, 2022
Messages
88
Just purchase a Hornady 390750 Primer Pocket Reamer for about $15. Chuck it in a hand drill at about 200 rpm, and go through the 1000 cases fairly quickly.

It would be silly in my opinion to buy new brass just to avoid removing the crimp.

71xHRb7diKL._AC_SL1500_.jpg
Second this. $20 to get rid of all the crimps you’d ever encounter. I just did about 1500 pieces with this. Zip tie the trigger on the drill, clamp drill aimed up, and find a rhythm. Don’t remember how long it took me, but it’s a good rainy day project that doesn’t use up a lot of brainpower.
 
Joined
May 15, 2022
Messages
460
Just purchase a Hornady 390750 Primer Pocket Reamer for about $15. Chuck it in a hand drill at about 200 rpm, and go through the 1000 cases fairly quickly.

It would be silly in my opinion to buy new brass just to avoid removing the crimp.

71xHRb7diKL._AC_SL1500_.jpg
This. But it takes time.
 
Joined
Apr 8, 2019
Messages
1,798
franklin aresenal swager...around 80 bucks on Amazon...I use it for 556 and 308. Quick easy worth every penny
 

FLS

WKR
Joined
May 11, 2019
Messages
743
Depends on how valuable your time is and how much you shoot I shoot a lot and hate processing brass, so I buy processed LC brass, 1K at a time and load my 223 on a progressive. used brass goes in a 5 gallon bucket. If the time comes I can’t get quality processed bass I’ll do my own.
 

Axlrod

WKR
Joined
Jan 8, 2017
Messages
1,164
Location
SW Montana
Joined
Feb 15, 2021
Messages
435
I bought a Hornady swager die for .223. Have done about 1000 rounds so far. Works really well.
 
Joined
Dec 13, 2017
Messages
575
Location
SE AZ
I have done large batches in the past. The mighty armory decap die will remove crimped primers without breaking.

FW Arms has a really solid decapper (among other products) that you can buy instead. Once I saw Mighty Armory owner’s openly racist rant on social media, I won’t support that company.
 
Joined
Mar 6, 2013
Messages
3,079
I use the cheap Hornady about that cuts the crimp out. Works well, I use it on a hand tool because I don’t come across that many crimps.
 

TX_Diver

WKR
Joined
May 27, 2019
Messages
2,263
Get rid of it and get new brass. PM me to dispose of it please lol.

I used the dillon swager and it wasn't too bad. Wouldn't want to do it repeatedly but as a 1x thing it's reasonable.
 
OP
T

T28w

WKR
Joined
Dec 10, 2018
Messages
585
Anyone tried both swager and cutting tools to know is there any difference in the pocket when finished. To my feeble mind the swager seems like it would be more likely to have primer pockets that last longer. I could see the cutting tools ending up with looser than ideal primers. There is a big diff in price between a swager and cutter, if no difference in end result them a cheap cutting one seems easy enough.

Thanks for the replies so far
 
Joined
Apr 8, 2019
Messages
1,798
Anyone tried both swager and cutting tools to know is there any difference in the pocket when finished. To my feeble mind the swager seems like it would be more likely to have primer pockets that last longer. I could see the cutting tools ending up with looser than ideal primers. There is a big diff in price between a swager and cutter, if no difference in end result them a cheap cutting one seems easy enough.

Thanks for the replies so far
I have used both didn't notice any difference other than your time...
 
Joined
Dec 4, 2018
Messages
2,291
For $30/100, I decided to just buy 500 pieces of new starline. Not sure how much you can save going with once fired/crimped but I have had bad experience with once fired/range brass in other carriages and wanted to avoid the headache.
 
Joined
Jun 26, 2022
Messages
88
Anyone tried both swager and cutting tools to know is there any difference in the pocket when finished. To my feeble mind the swager seems like it would be more likely to have primer pockets that last longer. I could see the cutting tools ending up with looser than ideal primers. There is a big diff in price between a swager and cutter, if no difference in end result them a cheap cutting one seems easy enough.

Thanks for the replies so far
Was kind of worried about the same thing, but that’s what I meant when I said get in a rhythm. The cutter should be stopped as soon as it touches the back of the primer pocket (you can feel it after a while). I’m sure if it was overused it was kill the primer pocket. That being said, I have not shot brass to the point of exhaustion using that tool yet. I do have quite a few 223s on they’re 3rd firing, so I’d say I’m pleased
 

Vern400

WKR
Joined
Aug 22, 2021
Messages
383
Anyone tried both swager and cutting tools to know is there any difference in the pocket when finished. To my feeble mind the swager seems like it would be more likely to have primer pockets that last longer. I could see the cutting tools ending up with looser than ideal primers. There is a big diff in price between a swager and cutter, if no difference in end result them a cheap cutting one seems easy enough.

Thanks for the replies so far
I give a quick spin with a hand tool to remove the ring of displaced material that was holding the primer, and then I run it through an RCBS swaging tool. I have not had any problems with loose primers but sometimes installation of new primers can be a little bit crunchy compared to really good brass. I use mostly hand tools and a single stage press so I can pretty much feel everything. On a progressive you probably wouldn't notice.
 
Top