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Damp Primers

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20 December 2006, 14:35
Johnny foreigner
Damp Primers
I have have moved house and managed to store my primers where they have got quite damp. Are these going to be okay to use? Do I need to put some VP90 in the container or bin the lot??
Thanks


DW
20 December 2006, 18:50
craigster
Water soaked primers can be dried out and used. I tried it once and the survival rate was about 80%. Put them in a warm dry place for a while and they might be okay.
21 December 2006, 00:10
vapodog
I had a couple hundred primers sitting in water once.....I dried them best I could with towels and set them in the sun to completely dry up.....100% of them went shooting prairie dogs and 100% of them went bang.


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21 December 2006, 01:04
Cheechako
A "warm dry place", "in the sun", and the "UK" is a contradiction of terms, isn't it?? Wink Wink

Seriously, primers can be dried out and will work. Think about it. They are assembled wet. I'm not sure i would use them for anything serious but for plinking, varmints, etc they should be fine.

Ray


Arizona Mountains
21 December 2006, 11:39
Johnny foreigner
quote:
Originally posted by Cheechako:
A "warm dry place", "in the sun", and the "UK" is a contradiction of terms, isn't it?? Wink Wink

Seriously, primers can be dried out and will work. Think about it. They are assembled wet. I'm not sure i would use them for anything serious but for plinking, varmints, etc they should be fine.

Ray

The warm and sunny bit would need to be abot 6 months from now...
Thanks for the advice, I'll put them in a sealed container with a bit of desicant for a few days before I load them.
Thanks again.


DW
22 December 2006, 12:06
Mark
The sooner you dry them out the better.

You can leave them in front of a heater duct for a few days, put them in a box with a 40 watt light bulb, or if your bathroom has a ceiling light fixture with one of the glass bowls that hangs down and is held on with a nut, just stick them up there for a week or 2. That works best if you're not married.

Whatever way you choose, use heat to dry them out and not dessicant as the primary method.


for every hour in front of the computer you should have 3 hours outside
22 December 2006, 14:11
Wink
I also had some wet primers once and just let them dry out in the house at room temperature. They worked OK, I didn't have any misfires. I don't think I would have worked up dangerous game loads with them though (although I once had a Federal 215 fizz on me right out of the package!)


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