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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146
Sidelock
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OP
Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146 |
I recently acquired more than a few Remington #57 primers. I have a small supply of older Remington/Peters cases but I would like a few more. Anyone have a stash of Rem/Pet cases collecting dust under the loading bench they've kept around hoping to pawn them on some sucker?
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Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169 |
What gauge? Have have been shooting *57 primers at skeet for years trying to get rid of them. Had 10,000 and am now down to a manageable quantity for my Alcan all brass hulls. But you NEVER know when you might get more Mike
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146
Sidelock
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OP
Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146 |
I shoot 12, 16 and 20 gauge. Most of my shooting is hunting, grouse, pheasant and the like. I make one or two trips west each year. The rest of the time I hunt MI or at my local gun club. I shoot about 1k/yr at clays. I need paper or plastic hulls, I have a good supply of fiber wads. thanks for asking
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Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169 |
You come out west, any chance of coming through Amarillo?
If I may be so bold, how many *57 primers are you trying to use up?
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146
Sidelock
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OP
Sidelock
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 146 |
I have over 1k plus a couple of boxes of RP plastic wads. I plan to use the primers for bird hunting, upland and waterfowl. I booked for a spring snow goose hunt, just finished loading 3 boxes of 3-inch 12 with iTX-10 #2's, ouch! I used new hull w/209 primers, but the loading manual has loads that will work in the older hulls. If the hunt goes well I'll go next spring, by then I hope to find enough 3-in R-P hulls. Next fall I'm planning a pot-hole hunt where I'll shoot 2-3/4, again if I can find enough hulls.
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Joined: May 2006
Posts: 328 Likes: 11
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 328 Likes: 11 |
I have a similar problem. I have just south of 4000 #57's. I recently was able to get 200 primed hulls off of GB and had another 100 cases. I'm presently loading them now for my target shooting and starting to make a dent in them. One fella I talked to from this board suggested to cut short pieces of plastic straw and put these over the primer and seat them in a standard 209 case. There are diffrent size straws so you have to get the right ones. I tried it and it does work but is very slow. I would load these for hunting loads since not that many are required but I shoot alot of targets and with components a bit hard to get now I went the old Remington hull route. Another thing you can try is to glue them in a standard case with RTV silicone. A little smear around the primer pocket should do it and you can let these hulls fly.
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Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,534 Likes: 169 |
USAF RET 1971-95
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 1,851 Likes: 150
Sidelock
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Sidelock
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 1,851 Likes: 150 |
I use superglue, just a dot of the stuff, to glue the #57 primers into cases I load with CleanShot BP sub powder.
I only load the cases once anyway with the stuff, so the glued in primer isn't a problem.
Somewhat of a pain, but it goes pretty fast.,,,
I line up 20 or 30 primers on the bench. Then take a deprimed case in one hand and with the tube of SG in the other,,put just a tiny amt inside the primer pocket. Then push that case down over one of the primers on the bench. Grab another case and do the same,,and on. It's easy to prime 50 to 100 in a few minutes. (Not so great if you get over confident and not watch the overflowing glue down on your fingers and hand).
Remington Black promo hull is the only one that I've found that will not melt and leave plastic in the bore with the BP sub. Still have to use card and fiber wads though.
But the primers were cheap at $5/brick. Marked as 'obsolete , will not fit modern shells'. I guess that's true.
I tried peening the primer pocket tighter on a ball bearing,,probably about 5/8"d. Just laying the ball on a lead block to keep it from skipping around,,it'll pound a seat into the lead after a bit of use. Put the deprimed shell pocket on the ball and I use a steel rod (1/2"?) down the hull. Give it a couple healthy wacks. It seems to crimp the mouth/face of the pocket inwards a bit.
It's enough to securely hold onto the #57 primer. It doesn't downsize the entire length of the primer pocket (I don't think),,just the mouth, but I think that's what the commercial tools do also. It's just got to hold it there so it doesn't fall out or back out. My light smokeless loads do fine with them and the crimp is reusable. So I run these through the MEC but single load the #57 primers so I don't get them mixed in with any 209s in the primer feed.
The smash-em method gets kind of old and nerve wracking after a couple boxes and the superglue method begins to look good again.
What we won't do for cheap reloads.
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