I knew an old cop once who reloaded all of his duty ammo. He nearly hand-crafted each round. There was no doubt the primers were seated properly, that the flash-holes were clear, that the powder charge was right, and the bullets seated and crimped properly.
I thought he was over-doing it, but after a couple misfires with our duty ammo, I chided the range-officer that I was going to start carrying the ball-ammo reloads that we used for practice, because they had NO misfires... I also ran across a 10mm case that was in a box of new cases that I purchased to reload, and lo-and-behold, there was NO flash-hole punched through the web of the case... If that case would have went to the factory for loading, a primer would have been seated and powder and ball loaded, and when it was issued/sold to someone and they tried to shoot it, it would have been a mis-fire.
Suddenly, it didn't sound so silly to hand-load the duty ammo...
When I load ammo that I depend on to be 100% reliable (such as hunting ammo or match ammo), I wear rubber gloves, load the primers in my Lee Auto-Prime, and hand-seat the primers. I've found the Auto-Prime's linkage has a weak enough leverage not to over-stress the primers, but still get them seated fully. Any round that doesn't feel just right on seating the primer, goes in the practice/warm-up/verifying scope pile.
I thought he was over-doing it, but after a couple misfires with our duty ammo, I chided the range-officer that I was going to start carrying the ball-ammo reloads that we used for practice, because they had NO misfires... I also ran across a 10mm case that was in a box of new cases that I purchased to reload, and lo-and-behold, there was NO flash-hole punched through the web of the case... If that case would have went to the factory for loading, a primer would have been seated and powder and ball loaded, and when it was issued/sold to someone and they tried to shoot it, it would have been a mis-fire.
Suddenly, it didn't sound so silly to hand-load the duty ammo...
When I load ammo that I depend on to be 100% reliable (such as hunting ammo or match ammo), I wear rubber gloves, load the primers in my Lee Auto-Prime, and hand-seat the primers. I've found the Auto-Prime's linkage has a weak enough leverage not to over-stress the primers, but still get them seated fully. Any round that doesn't feel just right on seating the primer, goes in the practice/warm-up/verifying scope pile.