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Posted: 2/20/2012 8:37:22 AM EDT
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Sooner or later, it will happen. You will need to pull bullets and life gets boring fast. The three-segment shell holders get old, fast. Ditch the slow shell holder and use a standard reloading press shell holder, it will fit most types. Next, what you hit makes a world of difference. It needs to hit something massive and hard. I have a 20 pound section of railroad rail which works well, a single hit will pull .45 ACP. Powder will spill from the hole in the cap. A simple pipe plug/cork/stopper which fits the hole makes this much cleaner. Have a few bowls for components. Again, powder can "splash" when the bullet hits. Either a bullet catching screen or put 2-3 layers of bullets in that bowl so the powder trickles beneath. A clean foam ear plug in the bullet puller will protect soft point bullets. Save bullet pulling for stress relief. Yes, I messed up with over 400 rounds of .45 ACP. Powder measure was running low and some have no powder. This was a powder puff load of AA5 so it should have flowed. No damage so far. |
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With all due respect I have to caution readers against using standard press shellholders rather than the collets that come with it.
The collets are a three piece expanding design that are made that way to alleviate pressure in the event that a round detonated. Chances are that it won't happen, but it can. All you need is a 1/4 to 1/2 twist of the cap and the brass can be pulled out of the collet, and the powder and the projectile can fall through. I've been using the Frankford Arsenal one since 2002 and it is great. I comes is real handy when you have loaded a recipe up for one rifle and then you trade it for one of the same caliber and realize that the 500 rounds you loaded are on the warm side or aren't accurate and you need to start over. For the reasons not to use a shellholder, read this link, and look at the photos. http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=frankford%20arsenal%20kinetic%20bullet%20puller%20warning%20against%20using%20shell%20holders&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CDcQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.shootersforum.com%2Fhandloading-equipment%2F50347-inertial-bullet-puller-warning.html&ei=xYdCT6PiOdK_gAeK3s2yCw&usg=AFQjCNHi4r075mNZVKeHOYLzgmhr7XxGjA&cad=rja |
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Interesting hypothesis but not supported in reality. I looked at the alignment of the primer in relation to the hole in the shell holder. There is no way for the primer to contact the shell holder with the cap on. Furthermore, the cap has to be removed to get the bullet out when breaking down pistol rounds. With the three segment shell holder, the best I can do is 4 per minute. I get 6 per minute with the press-type shell holder. |
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Interesting, I've never used anything but the collet when pulling the bullets, but looking at the photos it looks to me like the collet lets the burning powder vent much more effectively, which should substantially lower the risk involved if the primer should go off. Smokeless powders are progressive and burn faster with increased pressure, the shell holder wouldn't let it vent as well as the collet, thus increasing the pressure, allowing it to behave more like a cartridge, which would make it more dangerous in the event of a primer going off. |
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Quoted:
I get 6 per minute with the press-type shell holder. There are many people out there missing digits and other body parts who thought, "it can never happen to me". Eventually, you're going to detonate a round, and I sincerely hope that it both scares the living daylights out of you, and doesn't cause any injuries. |
| The easiest thing that I've found to use, that works really well, is the plastic weights that you fill with concrete. Just about everyone has an old set laying around. I just put the bar with the weights already on them next to the bench, ( well did, the weights and the reloading stuff was all in an extra bedroom at the other house, now I have to figure something out besides just banging it on the linoleum flooring), and give it a good whack. I don't let the hammer bounce back up, but rather try and make it sort of a dead blow. Normally it works in just a few whacks. |
| Another tip is to make sure that when your puller impacts that it is straight at the moment of impact. The handle should be perfectly as possible horizontal with the object you are hitting. Bullets pull easier and faster PLUS it helps prevent breaking your plastic kinetic impact puller. |
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Quoted:
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and my time is more valuable than all that. Whenever I hear that I think: "How much do you get paid to sit on your butt and watch TV? 99% of the time that's what their doing that is "more valuable". If that's what I was doing you'd be right. But tonight I'll have the TV on while I'm reloading .50's which is much more cost effective than breaking down 9mms. That's after I saw up some cedar for walking sticks, weld a cast iron pot, and set a gopher trap. |
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How I use mine, knock on wood, literally http://www.ar15.com/content/page.html?id=431 |
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I stopped using a shell holder, but only because it wrecks the plastic puller. They are a heck of a lot faster and less aggravation than the collets.
I was surprised at the damage accumulating where the shell holder bears against the puller body, I've busted a bunch of these tools, and didn't want to break another one, especially in the middle of breaking down some reloaded ammo I bought for the cases. |
| I only use a kinetic puller if I am pulling a few rounds. Otherwise I use a collet die puller. It is much faster and doesn't spill any powder. You also don't have to worry about damaging the tips of the bullet. The cost of the die and collet are not much more than a kinetic hammer. |
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