The high speed equipment I would like to see is Federals! They are the ones with the most sensitive primers! If they can do that at 5 rounds a second with their primers........
I used to think that Federal primers and Dillon Presses shouldn't mix, but then people started blowing things up with CCI's and Winchesters too.
And Federals primers are still the most popular among competition folks inspite of (or because of) the extra sensitivity.
This isn't really a question that the Dillon systems don't work.....they do and most of the time very well. It's more a question of whether tubes shields, the Dillon, RCBS, Hornady bandaids, are enough to keep ordinary human's from getting hurt.
Sort of like the recent study result of why the commercial space plane blew up. The copilot (who isn't here to defend himself) supposedly opened flaps that weren't supposed to be opened at high speed. The study faulted the builders of the plane, that they didn't have systems built-in to prevent him from doing that at high speed.
None of us are perfect, and except for Unclenick and Jmorris most of us aren't engineers either. So maybe Dillon, RCBS, Hornady, etc. ought to pool such talent together and create a safer, dummie proof, or at least "fatigued-user" proof primer system that doesn't mangle hands or worse.
APS isn't perfect, but it is wonderfully safe. Yet APS is proof that one manufacturer can't do it alone, because the rest ignore and ridicule it, not to mention the one who built the system alone is inclined to hoard the technology and help cause the ignoring and ridiculing.......I believe that lays the fault everywhere.....except I would also include those in the hobby who perpetuate the same, even though they are without personal experience using the maligned system, in the name of brand loyalty, tradition or "it never happened to me" mentality.
The loader who posted this spring has bought a turret and a hand primer.....he's done with tubes. Shame, really, shouldn't have happened.
Reloading is pretty safe. Granted, we can't fix the stupid in any of us, if we choose to remain ignorant and do stupid things. (reminded of the guy who stores loose primers in Mason jars, or the beginner who simply filled his cases to the top with smokeless powder with no clue that
that such was at least a double charge.) That said, we all get tired, or complacent or distracted. We don't always stop at that point, even though we should.
But we can make priming safer....RCBS proved it, then ignored what they learned because it didn't light the reloading world on fire, and give them the progressive market.........now they will try 7 stations with pipe bombs holding 100 primers together in a tube.....again.
I expect we will share the first disaster photos posted on the forums resulting from this combination.....about time we see a
green primer disaster photo for once.
BTW, jmorris, Unclenick explained the popular theory of why that tube is in the ceiling.....first paragraph in his post. Correction: That picture was from a Hornady AP accident....not Dillon as I previously thought. The clue shoulda been the Hornady Lube in the picture, hah!