TheClasonater
Inactive
Hello all, I'm excited to be a part of this site. Read a lot on here over the years and it's been helpful. This is my first post.
My father in law passed away unexpectedly about a year and a half ago and everybody is now starting to get back into a more settled groove. My mother in law left his complete reloading set up and bench untouched this whole time. She finally rejoined their pistol league and asked if I could reload her target rounds. .38 spl. 125 gn fmj with 4.5 grains of bullseye. Very light.
I had helped him in the past but never really wanted to pursue it yet. I mostly shoot shotguns. I understand the process but I really dont have a feel for it yet. Here are my two questions.
He used a walnut medium and there is a small amount left inside the case. Not mounded up or anything, just enough that its noticeably red. All the primer holes are free and clear of debris. IS THIS SAFE? Or do I need to swab this out? I never really noticed this before helping him out, but I wasn't looking for it either. I have read a dozen other threads where this same question was asked, but all the threads immediately turned to a corn cob vs walnut vs ss debate, and never answered the ops question. I'm not going to buy cc because he left us gallons of new walnut medium that will probably take me years to get through.
My second question. He used an rcbs hand primer. Its janky and horrible to use. I have no feel for it, and never have. About 50% of my rounds yesterday came out with with a little half moon shape indentation on the ptimer. I researched the cause of this and I understand why, but again, IS THIS SAFE? Will they go bang?
If I were shooting these I honestly wouldn't care, but these are for somebody else, and I want to make sure that I will not send out a potentially unsafe box of rounds. P.S. I bought a bench primer last night because I ain't dicking with hand circus no more.
My father in law passed away unexpectedly about a year and a half ago and everybody is now starting to get back into a more settled groove. My mother in law left his complete reloading set up and bench untouched this whole time. She finally rejoined their pistol league and asked if I could reload her target rounds. .38 spl. 125 gn fmj with 4.5 grains of bullseye. Very light.
I had helped him in the past but never really wanted to pursue it yet. I mostly shoot shotguns. I understand the process but I really dont have a feel for it yet. Here are my two questions.
He used a walnut medium and there is a small amount left inside the case. Not mounded up or anything, just enough that its noticeably red. All the primer holes are free and clear of debris. IS THIS SAFE? Or do I need to swab this out? I never really noticed this before helping him out, but I wasn't looking for it either. I have read a dozen other threads where this same question was asked, but all the threads immediately turned to a corn cob vs walnut vs ss debate, and never answered the ops question. I'm not going to buy cc because he left us gallons of new walnut medium that will probably take me years to get through.
My second question. He used an rcbs hand primer. Its janky and horrible to use. I have no feel for it, and never have. About 50% of my rounds yesterday came out with with a little half moon shape indentation on the ptimer. I researched the cause of this and I understand why, but again, IS THIS SAFE? Will they go bang?
If I were shooting these I honestly wouldn't care, but these are for somebody else, and I want to make sure that I will not send out a potentially unsafe box of rounds. P.S. I bought a bench primer last night because I ain't dicking with hand circus no more.