Tell me about the mysterious exploding primers?

Some idiot was saying when you reload metallic cartridges it's very very common for primers to just go off. This cannot possibly be true, can it?

Anonymous2010-03-24T09:17:16Z

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Thousands of rifle and shot shells,never had anything explode,never. If it were common reloading wouldn't be.

randy2010-03-24T13:39:10Z

It is extremely rare for a primer to detonate during the reloading process as long as you exercise proper handling and safety techniques. Not impossible, just rare, but that is why you should always wear eye protection when reloading, and if you use a lee or RCBS auto prime, always lean it away from your face as you squeeze the handle to seat the primer. How rare is it? well, I started reloading just about 34-35 years ago and at one point when shooting pistol competition, I was reloading 1000 rounds per week, in all that time, I have never had a primer detonate during the loading process, nor do I know of any of my friends who reload having it happen either. With all that, do I wear safety glasses when reloading? your darn right I do!
Shoot safe

Texas Pride2010-03-24T11:24:20Z

The most common way to set off a primer while reloading is decapping a live primer. Some people say never do this because of the risk. The alternative is to chamber the primed casing and fire it in your gun. That works, but for expediency's sake many of us just carefully put it through a decapping or resizing die.

I have mistakenly decapped live primers, thinking the cases were fired already. Since I didn't know they were live, I wasn't even being very gentle. Still none of them popped. Primers are designed to take a pretty strong impact and still not go off. It takes a sharp strike from a firing pin to set them off. I still recommend being careful and wearing eye protection, but the risk really is minimal. I've never seen one go off before, but the pressure is so low that it's not going to hurt anything. Probably the biggest risk is to your pants if it startles you bad enough.

Good luck, --Tex

Anonymous2010-03-24T09:10:09Z

Every reloading manual out there will tell you to wear eye protection when reloading just in case the freak happens. It's remotely possible to blow a primer if you don't pay attention to what you're doing, but it would be user error. Of the top of my head trying to prime an already primed case and really leaning on the handle because it won't budge might set one off.

Between myself and 1/2 dozen reloaders I know we've done I don't know how many thousands or rounds without incident.

corey h2010-03-24T11:18:44Z

I had a primer get caught in the wrong spot on my Dillon 550 press when it jumped out of the primer feed tube. I didn't see it, but when I ran the press down on it and crushed it there was a bang like a loud cap gun. This happened one time in over 20 years of using a progressive loader, so I would say based on my experience that it is pretty rare.

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