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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Reloading Berdan primed .308
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<blockquote data-quote="Repubiman" data-source="post: 2521820" data-attributes="member: 971"><p>Ok as I'm fairly new to reloading, and still doing a lot of reading and researching, I need to ask a couple questions</p><p>regarding reloading of .308 ammo. I haven't reloaded any rifle ammo yet but plan on reloading .308 for a M1A, 5.56 for AR and .243 for my bolt rifle. I have reloaded a lot of pistol ammo and it's been great but still researching and such</p><p>before I take the plunge into rifle ammo.</p><p></p><p>I have over a 1000 rds. of South African .308 ammo that I shoot in my M1A. When I got into reloading I thought</p><p>well cool. I can save all my SA .308 and reload it. Well now I just read that since the case is Berdan primed, it's</p><p>best to just scrap the .308 berdan primed cases and find boxer primed only.</p><p></p><p>As I stated I am new to reloading and thought once it was fired, I could just remove the berdan primer and retrofit</p><p>with boxer primer and be good to go. As I understand it, that is not something I can do, due to the 2 flash holes in</p><p>the case for berdan primed brass. Is this correct?</p><p></p><p>Really a bummer because I hardly have any .308 brass now that most of it is berdan primed. I even went and bought</p><p>a special depriming tool for depriming military ammo. Is that useless now too? It's a Dillion Super Swage 600. Or,</p><p>can I still use the Super Swage to deprime all military cases that are crimped primers? Will 5.56 x 45 military brass</p><p>have crimped in primers or not?</p><p></p><p>So as I see it, I can shoot the .308 SA and enjoy that I bought it back when .308 was still cheap. I bought my first 980 rd. case of the SA .308 for $228 which is around .23 cent per round. lol.... then just sell the cases for scrap or is there other things I might be able to do with it like tring to find berdan primers if they still sell them.</p><p></p><p>Thanks for any light you can shed on this.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Repubiman, post: 2521820, member: 971"] Ok as I'm fairly new to reloading, and still doing a lot of reading and researching, I need to ask a couple questions regarding reloading of .308 ammo. I haven't reloaded any rifle ammo yet but plan on reloading .308 for a M1A, 5.56 for AR and .243 for my bolt rifle. I have reloaded a lot of pistol ammo and it's been great but still researching and such before I take the plunge into rifle ammo. I have over a 1000 rds. of South African .308 ammo that I shoot in my M1A. When I got into reloading I thought well cool. I can save all my SA .308 and reload it. Well now I just read that since the case is Berdan primed, it's best to just scrap the .308 berdan primed cases and find boxer primed only. As I stated I am new to reloading and thought once it was fired, I could just remove the berdan primer and retrofit with boxer primer and be good to go. As I understand it, that is not something I can do, due to the 2 flash holes in the case for berdan primed brass. Is this correct? Really a bummer because I hardly have any .308 brass now that most of it is berdan primed. I even went and bought a special depriming tool for depriming military ammo. Is that useless now too? It's a Dillion Super Swage 600. Or, can I still use the Super Swage to deprime all military cases that are crimped primers? Will 5.56 x 45 military brass have crimped in primers or not? So as I see it, I can shoot the .308 SA and enjoy that I bought it back when .308 was still cheap. I bought my first 980 rd. case of the SA .308 for $228 which is around .23 cent per round. lol.... then just sell the cases for scrap or is there other things I might be able to do with it like tring to find berdan primers if they still sell them. Thanks for any light you can shed on this. [/QUOTE]
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Reloading Berdan primed .308
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