Everything was running smoothly on the MEC 9000G 12ga reloader machine.
Then this one Remington greenie hull was reeealy hard to deprime.
I've had some that were stubborn in the past, usually the spent primer gets a little rust started in there and freezes the primer to the metal (steel) head.
This one was a bit more than that, but it went through and I heard the spent primer drop into the tray beneath.
When I lifted the handle, the deprimed hull rotated to the next station and this is what was what I saw.
I've had a lot of odd stuff stuck in hulls that I've picked up at the range. Especially the SC course.
But never an empty 22 case.
Pretty good leverage on the MEC to be able to punch the blunt end decapper pin through it like that.
I usually have a good habit of giving each hull a shake before placing it on the first station, just to rid it of anything foreign inside.
Guess I kicked the habit on this one.
Then this one Remington greenie hull was reeealy hard to deprime.
I've had some that were stubborn in the past, usually the spent primer gets a little rust started in there and freezes the primer to the metal (steel) head.
This one was a bit more than that, but it went through and I heard the spent primer drop into the tray beneath.
When I lifted the handle, the deprimed hull rotated to the next station and this is what was what I saw.


I've had a lot of odd stuff stuck in hulls that I've picked up at the range. Especially the SC course.
But never an empty 22 case.
Pretty good leverage on the MEC to be able to punch the blunt end decapper pin through it like that.
I usually have a good habit of giving each hull a shake before placing it on the first station, just to rid it of anything foreign inside.
Guess I kicked the habit on this one.