New Lee Bench Prime
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New Lee Bench Prime
I ordered a Lee Bench Prime on Saturday morning from Titan, and it arrived today about noon. I took it to my shop, unpacked it and read the directions (yes, I did!). I mounted it to a scrap 3/4" piece of wood and assembled it as per instructions. I put 60 Winchester primers in the tray and closed the tray (it folds in the middle) and lifted it to return to the press, spilling 14 primers. Had I remembered what I read I would have moved the slide lock lever into the right position and not spilled any primers. Replaced the primers and slid the slide lock to the "locked" position, inserted the tray into the tool, slid the slide lock to the "open" position.
I ran 60 Speer 9mm cases through the tool. The priming was easy and positive. I could feel the primers seating fully (the ram has about 3/16" more travel than the primer pocket end, so I know the primers were fully seated). Primers slid into place smoothly, with no "tight spots" or chatter. I refiled the tray and primed another 100 cases.
Of the 160 cases primed I had 3 OOPS!. Two had primers inserted sideways and one was backward. On two occasions I had to flick the tray with my finger to clear a "log jam" of primers. I believe these problems were partially caused by my method; I short stroked the handle a few times and wasn't watching the primer in the tray. I believe the tool (and me) will improve as I get used to it and correct my mistakes. So far the performance is better than my 3 hand priming tools (2 Lee and one Hornady). I'm gonna prime some more 9mm, do some 45 ACP, and try it out with some mil spec. 30-06 brass with various makes of primers.
I think this tools is well designed and made and I plan on using it a lot...
Addition 3/09/16; The OOPS! were caused by me. Tried several more and made sure I didn't "short stroke" the handle. Problem gone...
I ran 60 Speer 9mm cases through the tool. The priming was easy and positive. I could feel the primers seating fully (the ram has about 3/16" more travel than the primer pocket end, so I know the primers were fully seated). Primers slid into place smoothly, with no "tight spots" or chatter. I refiled the tray and primed another 100 cases.
Of the 160 cases primed I had 3 OOPS!. Two had primers inserted sideways and one was backward. On two occasions I had to flick the tray with my finger to clear a "log jam" of primers. I believe these problems were partially caused by my method; I short stroked the handle a few times and wasn't watching the primer in the tray. I believe the tool (and me) will improve as I get used to it and correct my mistakes. So far the performance is better than my 3 hand priming tools (2 Lee and one Hornady). I'm gonna prime some more 9mm, do some 45 ACP, and try it out with some mil spec. 30-06 brass with various makes of primers.
I think this tools is well designed and made and I plan on using it a lot...
Addition 3/09/16; The OOPS! were caused by me. Tried several more and made sure I didn't "short stroke" the handle. Problem gone...
Last edited by mikld on 09 Mar 2016 11:15, edited 1 time in total.
- Fyodor
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
Thanks for your report. I'm interested in how this item works, even if I have only little use for a bench primer system.
I guess (haven't seen it yet), that the primer seperating mechnism is the same as in the ergo prime. That is quite reliably, but sensitive to short stroking. It will flip primers if you do. So if they use the same mechanism, that in fact is the reason, and should work fine if you pay attention to not short stroking.
I guess (haven't seen it yet), that the primer seperating mechnism is the same as in the ergo prime. That is quite reliably, but sensitive to short stroking. It will flip primers if you do. So if they use the same mechanism, that in fact is the reason, and should work fine if you pay attention to not short stroking.
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- Evelyn Beatrice Hall, often misattributed to Voltaire
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
I got one yesterday. Used it all day today. I am throwing mine in the trash. Got tired of dumping primers all over, failure to feed, sideways primers and jam ups. Not worth the postage to return it.
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
I appreciated both good and bad reports on any products. It helps in my decision making on purchases.
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
Before you toss it read this.Number6 wrote:I got one yesterday. Used it all day today. I am throwing mine in the trash. Got tired of dumping primers all over, failure to feed, sideways primers and jam ups. Not worth the postage to return it.
http://www.lee-loader.com/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1598
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
First, ya gotta be smarter than the tool (JK, my Pa always said that when I said "can't use this thing, it don't work"). The instructions on where the sliding lock positioning will tell you how to cure your spilling primers. Also in the instructions it says "Lift lever against rubber up-stop to feed a new primer into the elevator." in two different places which will eliminate any sideways or upside down primers.Number6 wrote:I got one yesterday. Used it all day today. I am throwing mine in the trash. Got tired of dumping primers all over, failure to feed, sideways primers and jam ups. Not worth the postage to return it.
Real men do read instructions...
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
Unfortunately my bench primer is green. I have the RCBS auto prime and have for years and yes you do have to fill tubes, but as long as you keep the hair pin in the other end you don't spill primers. I cant say as I ever had one up side down or side ways either.
Make smoke,
Make smoke,
Curt.......makin' smoke and raising my carbon foot print one cartridge at a time
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Re: New Lee Bench Prime
Addendum, 3/09/16; Primed some 30-06 military cases and some R-P cases yesterday. First 20 were mixed headstamp military, prepped (sized, trimmed, pockets de-crimped, cleaned) and used Wolf LR primers, not my favorite priming task (Wolf+mil. spec. brass). Primer insertion was much more difficult/stiff than hand gun priming. Got a couple "crushed" primers, fully seated but a bit "flattened". Switched to Remington LR primers, and priming was easier, much more positive, but still a little rough. Switched to R-P brass (twice fired in my Garand) and priming with Remington primers. Smooth, easy priming. All fed positively.
I have found that the unit would work better if solidly mounted on a bench. My tool is mounted to a piece of board, 3/4" but too light so I put a 20 lb ingot on it to keep it from moving. I'll fabricate a solid mount similar to how I use my "priming/bullet sizing press". Still this is the only "down side" that I've found for my new Lee Bench Prime...
I have found that the unit would work better if solidly mounted on a bench. My tool is mounted to a piece of board, 3/4" but too light so I put a 20 lb ingot on it to keep it from moving. I'll fabricate a solid mount similar to how I use my "priming/bullet sizing press". Still this is the only "down side" that I've found for my new Lee Bench Prime...
Re: New Lee Bench Prime
I did read the instructions, I tried CCI and Winchester primers, the primers hang in the folding container, and the feed tube, of the feed tube jams you are unable to force the lock / on / open slider because primers block it. It must be turned up side down so the primers will clear the feed path.mikld wrote:First, ya gotta be smarter than the tool (JK, my Pa always said that when I said "can't use this thing, it don't work"). The instructions on where the sliding lock positioning will tell you how to cure your spilling primers. Also in the instructions it says "Lift lever against rubber up-stop to feed a new primer into the elevator." in two different places which will eliminate any sideways or upside down primers.Number6 wrote:I got one yesterday. Used it all day today. I am throwing mine in the trash. Got tired of dumping primers all over, failure to feed, sideways primers and jam ups. Not worth the postage to return it.
Real men do read instructions...