Most often posts here look for advice regarding the probability that a primer won't fail to ignite. Although nothing lives forever, responses are in agreement that primers are stable and useful for long periods of time.
There are occasions, however, when we might need to deactivate the primer before discarding it, should that need arise. One situation is priming a case only to find the primer seated too easily, signaling the primer pocket has enlarged. One solution might be to simply fire the primer, pointing the weapon in a safe direction, perhaps into an empty garbage can. But recently reading Lyman's 50th Edition, the book points out that gases escaping around the loose primer can damage the bolt face. I suspect this includes a powder charge, but I happen to have about thirty .270 cases with live primers seated in loose pockets and I wonder if firing them all might damage the bolt face.
As a result, I'm wondering if anyone has found a substance, for example, poured into the empty case, that would deactivate the primer so the garbage collection folks don't get a surprise when crushing the trash collected.
There are occasions, however, when we might need to deactivate the primer before discarding it, should that need arise. One situation is priming a case only to find the primer seated too easily, signaling the primer pocket has enlarged. One solution might be to simply fire the primer, pointing the weapon in a safe direction, perhaps into an empty garbage can. But recently reading Lyman's 50th Edition, the book points out that gases escaping around the loose primer can damage the bolt face. I suspect this includes a powder charge, but I happen to have about thirty .270 cases with live primers seated in loose pockets and I wonder if firing them all might damage the bolt face.
As a result, I'm wondering if anyone has found a substance, for example, poured into the empty case, that would deactivate the primer so the garbage collection folks don't get a surprise when crushing the trash collected.