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Pulling Crimped Bullets
l-girl
Member Posts: 131 ✭✭✭
My buddy inherited several hundred rounds of reloaded ammo. He is playing it smart by pulling all the rounds and starting over with known quantities of powder.
Using an impact puller, he has had no problems disassembling non crimped rounds. However, no matter how hard he slams the puller, crimped bullets won't even budge.
Is there another tool he should try?
The primers may be 20 years old? Should he pop all those out also?
Thanks
Best regards,Rich
Using an impact puller, he has had no problems disassembling non crimped rounds. However, no matter how hard he slams the puller, crimped bullets won't even budge.
Is there another tool he should try?
The primers may be 20 years old? Should he pop all those out also?
Thanks
Best regards,Rich
Comments
As for the primers. If there is doubt as to the storage conditions I would opt to pop those puppies. Unless they will be used for general plinking. In that case I'd just go to the range and feed them through. If they go pop, thats great. If not; pause a few seconds before removing them from the rifle and than dismantle all that were duds. I would caution you on trying to deprime any undented primers!! There is a lot of power in those little rascals.
nb
hole and rock it a bit. This loosens the crimp and/or the sealer. Then I complete the removal with the impact puller. Unless you feel that these rounds are patently dangerous, I would also just shoot them as plinkers or practice rounds. Ammo can last for a long time and still be quite OK for most purposes.
Have fun, be careful!
Morty
After he has a supply of the brass, dump the powder (makes great fertilzer) and try firing a sample of the primed empty cases. If they go boom, odds are he will be fine. If not, still do this expercise and trash the misfires (don't risk depriming them unless you deaden the priming compound for sure with WD-40 or similar chemicals, which is a real labor intensive task to clean out and not worth the effort except for really exotic calibers). If the sample all fire reliably, just leave the primers in place and reload - although I'd limit this lot to casual shooting.