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Primitive reloading tool.


Warden Callaway

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Sawmill Mary and I did the Museum of the Appalachian near Knoxville Tennessee on Friday.  They have an impressive display of pioneering gunsmithing shop tools.  Ț

 

One of the many small items on display was a homemade wooden tool to decap and reprime a case.  

 

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Just a block with two pegs.  The peg on the right has a steel pin to push out the primer. 

 

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A view from another angle showing the nail head or screw that when swing the lever over pushes the primer in. 

 

This tool won't put Dillon out of business but I can see one scaled up to deprime and reprime 12 gauge brass hulls.  Could be made of metal if you were a better metal worker than wood worker.

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love these old tools , not sure what the heirs will do with them but i pick these up when i find them , thats one ive not yet seen available , probably on the "one of a kind" order , 

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2 hours ago, watab kid said:

love these old tools , not sure what the heirs will do with them but i pick these up when i find them , thats one ive not yet seen available , probably on the "one of a kind" order , 

 

I'm bad about "collecting" them too.  

 

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Here is a 12 gauge loading block. 

 

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Fill it up with primed hulls and stuff 50 at one setting.

 

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I've not tried it out yet.  Been meaning to make a video. I'm sure the block was part of an assembly line process were powder, wads, shot were dropped in 50 at a time as it was passed down the line. 

 

While in Dixie Gun Works on Saturday morning,  I looked at an interesting loading block.  It was a board say 16" long by 5" wide by a full 1" thick with maybe 100 holes maybe 44 caliber.  One edge was undercut like for shiplapped. The back side was stenciled in ink lots of suff - company name etc.  It was also some part of an assembly line process.   I should have bought it. 

 

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Here is a reloading kit I picked up at one of our toy stores.

 

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It's missing the cleaning rod and capping tool. But has an old DuPont powder can. 

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The Sheldon Jackson museum in Sitka, Alaska has a collection of reloading tools made by Inuit from walrus ivory.  The bullet molds were made using slate inserts hand carved to cast the desired bullet shape.  Very interesting and ingenious.  

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