Winchester Large Pistol Primer

$137.89

Smokeless Powder, Black Powder, Primers, and Fuses ship from our warehouse with other products. This ensures no more than one Shipping Charge and one HazMat Charge per order (unless you also order products that Ship Separately from MidwayUSA or our Suppliers). Each order is limited to no more than 25 pounds of Black Powder, and no more than 66 pounds each of Smokeless Powder, Primers, or Fuse. Smokeless Powder, Black Powder, Primers, and Fuses are considered hazardous materials, incur HazMat Charges, and can only ship ground freight within the continental U.S. Due to safety considerations and legal/regulatory reasons, Smokeless Powder, Black Powder, Primers, and Fuses cannot be returned.

I want to make glue gun bullets, I have a Lee 2 bullet mold TL356-124-TC .356 diameter,. 124 grain. It says I can make 9mm luger, 38 super, .380 bullets. I will use my 38 special, or my 357 Magnum revolvers. My question is what primers will I need, again no powder used, just glue gun bullet fired by a primer. In 1 video the guy mentioned 300 400fps primers. If someone has this answer please respond to this question

38 special and 357 mag cases require small pistol or small magnum pistol primers. Maybe the use of the magnum primers results in 400 fps. It is possible to use small rifle primers ,but you won’t gain anything better than just using small pistol magnum primers. These rifle primers aren’t a proper fit, but can be placed in pistol cases , ask me how i know..

Do not use WLP for .38 Special, use Small Pistol primers Winchester are great just use WSP or CCI #500 Small Pistol Primers. Also buy a reloading manual like Hornady 10th Edition, or Lee’s Reloading Manual. Lots of good information in both books.

Since 1999 I have reloaded over 15,000 rounds of pistol and revolver ammo using Winchester Large Pistol Primers. Most have been 45 Auto for Bullseye Competition Matches, but I also loaded 45 Colt, 45 Auto Rim, 44 Special, and 44 Magnum. I have never had any misfires in any of my guns and never had.

If a primer fails to detonate, it is usually a Winchester. You can tell because they are copper colored. Over the years, it has been sporadic, but I got some at a gun shop during that crazy primer shortage, and 20 percent of them were bad. In defense of the primers , they might have been stored

Winchester primers have been around longer than I have and have always done the job exactly as expected. I will continue to use them.

I have been re-loading since 1978. Winchester primers are my go to primer when they are available. Very consistent in ignition and superior in performance overall.

Excellent product that goes “bang” every time. Very consistent results from load to load. One primer for magnum and standard large pistol rounds simplifies my inventory situation. Try them and you’ll love them also.

These non-corrosive, all weather primers deliver fast, dependable ignition under any shooting condition. Primers are constantly and rigorously tested for consistency and sensitivity at temperatures and conditions far beyond the range of normal usage. Winchester guarantees better sensitivity for more positive firing in all guns, carefully-controlled weights of primer mixtures, consistency in size and quality, precise measurements and tolerances for anvil heights and stability in extremes of temperatures and humidity.

I want to make glue gun bullets, I have a Lee 2 bullet mold TL356-124-TC .356 diameter,. 124 grain. It says I can make 9mm luger, 38 super, .380 bullets. I will use my 38 special, or my 357 Magnum revolvers. My question is what primers will I need, again no powder used, just glue gun bullet fired by a primer. In 1 video the guy mentioned 300 400fps primers. If someone has this answer please respond to this question.

SKU: 343899 Category: