deffo!, if you are doing a lot then a swaging tool is the way forward
500 cases should take a couple of hours. Only needs a turn or two each with a reamer/ countersink.
I have sorted mine in the past while the Mrs is watching some rubbish on the TV. "Quality time" well spent!
Not in my experience with GGG 5.56, you have to remove a lot of material to get a decent seat for your new primer.Just pushing the primer out removes most of the crimp...and a wipe with a primer pocket reamer/cleaner or a countersink will deal with the rest.
Alan
Not in my experience with GGG 5.56, you have to remove a lot of material to get a decent seat for your new primer.
After a couple of years of reaming I bought an RCBS primer pocket swager 2. Best thing I ever did! Gives a nice even pocket with really removing any material
.308 may be different but what you are describing would not be the case. As both myself and @kennyc found with a reamer you think you’ve removed enough material visually and you still get so much resistance seating that you can crush some primers so you have to remove more material.On the GGG cases I experimented with the crimp bulges only went into the pocket a little way and just overhang the radius of the primer cup...the actual wall of the primer is not affected.
Depriming pushed most of the crimp bulge back and there was just a little bit remaining that came out with a countersink...the countersink did not go below the radius of the primer so did not reduce the contact surface area / seal of the primer against the pocket wall.
I am sure a swager works fine at pushing the bulges back...but the added advantage of a wipe with a countersink is that there is a lead in for the new primers at the mouth of the pocket.
Alan
If you were crushing primers then yes obviously not enough metal was removed or pushed back...but I am surprised you experienced that having used a reamer which presumably can only cut to its fixed diameter..308 may be different but what you are describing would not be the case. As both myself and @kennyc found with a reamer you think you’ve removed enough material visually and you still get so much resistance seating that you can crush some primers so you have to remove more material.
If you have a lot of cases to do the swager is the way forward