03 June 2003, 17:46
hvyw8tare match grade primers slow to ignite in the cold??
Someone told me not to use federal match grade primers in hunting loads due to erratic ignition in extreme cold. is there any truth to this?
04 June 2003, 00:51
<reload>hvy,No, they will burn with more concisely under any conditions that is why they are match primers.
04 June 2003, 00:56
onefunzr2Use magnum primers in extreme cold,regardless of brand name. But you must work up your load just like you did with the regular primers.
04 June 2003, 02:13
Bob257What's extreme cold? Here in Pa we don't get that I guess. I've never had problems with ignition with Federal 210M's. I don't use magnum primers unless the charge is over 70 grains or it's a ball powder that may be harder to ignite.
Bob257
04 June 2003, 03:01
Bob338Most of my loads in 338 Win Mag utilize Federal 210M's. I've shot in weather as low as -20�F and haven't experienced any problems.
Match grade primers are truly no different than the regular primers of the same spec, except they are manufactured to more consistent and closer tolerances. I'm told the Federal primers come of the same line but are sorted more uniformly by weight for more consistent ignition.
[ 06-03-2003, 18:02: Message edited by: Bob338 ]The only difference I can think of is that they might have a slightly lower intensity, which might be a cause of poor ignition at low temperatures. Pure speculation on my part, though. FWIW, Dutch.
04 June 2003, 15:08
Alberta CanuckSame primers as the regular primers (F-210-GMM's and ordinary F-210's, that is). Just more inspectors on the line when running the Match Grade ones. Considerably decreases the chance of getting a "bad" one.
AC