Winchester Large Pistol Primers #7 Box of 1000 10 Trays of 100
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. Winchester Large Pistol Primers #7 Box of 1000 10 Trays of 100
Packaging is marked for Standard or Magnum pistol loads. Consult your reloading manual before reloading.
Quantity Information:
- Box of 1000: 10 Sleeves of 100
- Box of 5000: 5 boxes of 1000
Made In United States of America
Quantity | 1000 Piece |
Primer Size | Large Pistol |
Country of Origin | United States of America |
Delivery Information
Shipping Weight | 1.095 Pounds |
DOT-Regulated | Yes |
Carrier Restrictions |
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HazMat Product | Yes |
Jay –
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.
Mason –
what primers should iuse for38s
Bond –
what primers will i need to reload s and w 500 mag
Jayden –
Works great and goes bang every time. In these crazy times if I could only get some more.
Julius –
finally in stock
Alain –
Winchester primers have been around longer than I have and have always done the job exactly as expected. I will continue to use them.
Barry –
I used them for reloading, as my Reloader hates CCI
Harrison –
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.
Wells –
Work fine for me I like the non- plated finish.
John –
I use them to load 45 ACP. Very happy with them.
Louis –
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.
Micheal –
My standard for 45 acp. Wish this order would have made it to my door – ups lost it.
Gabriella –
good primers
Joe –
As a competition Cowboy Action shooter for over 25 years, I have never had a primer related malfunction with this brand.
Chris –
I use these and shoot at LEAST 4 days/week, usually more. They’re extremely reliable.
Conna –
Love this product I have purchased and used these many time
Kyle –
We continue to purchase these.
Kyle –
Great
Jane –
Great product. Consistent ignition and easy to load. Have been using CCI primers for years but decided to try these Winchesters. Found them to be an excellent product and with the rebate you cannot beat the price.
Stephen –
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 any seating problems with these primers. I have used both a Lee Auto Prime and the RCBS Hand Held Priming Tool. I have also used Winchester Primers in a Dillon RL550B progressive loader with no problems. I find that CCI Primers have a thicker or harder cup than other brands and Federal primers have thinner or softer cups and get flattened more even when using light target loads. Winchester primers are somewhere in between and look “normal” with all of my loads. They seem to have no problem igniting even slow burning powders like WW 296, Hodgdon 110, or IMR 4227. In short, I really like these primers and highly recommend them.
Kelly –
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 this crazy primer shortage, and 20 percent of them were bad. In defense of the primers , they might have been stored improperly at that gun shop. I have since used 5000 that I got so cheap I couldn’t pass it up, and all of those fired. I think the thing to be said is buy fresh ones.
Nike –
Good primers. Always wait for a “Deal”
Jerry –
I am not a long term reloader, nor for that matter, I am not a high count reloader. I reload between 250 -750 rounds of a given caliber at any time. Winchester primers have been the “Go to” primer for me. Winchester was preferred by my reloading mentor and with my total round count nearing 50,000 I have never had a bad primer. As stated my reloading days are few, but the performance produced by using Winchester primers have me looking like a pro. The product has been perfect for me and I would strongly advise anyone to try the product for yourself. Good Luck
Jerve –
I have used Winchester primers for 25 years, about 90k rounds reloaded. There have been 2 FTF rounds in that time that were faulty primers for the Large Pistol primers. Autopsies of said rounds revealed the cause. Not perfect, but excellent.
David –
I’ll use CCI when I can’t find Winchester primers. They always seat easily and never a misfire.
Hildrick –
I like the fact that it’s both large pistol/magnum pistol friendly. I prefer CCI but have not had issues with Winchester primers in the past.
Davis –
good
Kenny –
Have loaded around 2000 45acp with these. Usually have about 1-3 per 100 rounds that don’t fire even with a good primer strike. Put it in another 1911 and it goes bang. Use for target and IDPA
Thomas –
I suspect that these primers are more sensitive, in the packaged state, to humidity, temperature and contamination than other primers. Loaded 100 .45 LC and had three misfires, 100 .45 ACP and had three or four misfires. Before using them, I stored them in a secure closet in the garage that is not air conditioned. Also, my auto prime broke so they were primed one at a time by hand and it was HOT where I was loading. The combination of a humid Florida summer and sweaty fingers were probably the culprits. Incidentally, Remington primers stored under the same conditions have not been problematic.
Shootnhunt –
I’m a very serious shooter and loader and have had a lot of experience with Winchester Large Pistol primers. When ever I have a light primer strike it is with Winchester primers. The striker spring is new and striker channel clean. The primer is seated deep enough. Seems like lately some lots are better than other lots. It is a knew fact if you have a comp gun with a lighter striker spring use Federal primer because they are softer . I only buy Winchester if that is all that can be had. I don’t use lighter springs in my pistols
Earl –
Had a number of failure to detonate primers in 1000 rounds (5). Happened in an XD (2) and S&W 625 (3). All primers had a good primer strike dent centered on the primer. Other rounds (both reloads with other primers and factory loads) did not have any problems.
Oklahoma Mike –
Can’t hammer them on. but need to will not go on easily
V T –
Mostly I use once fired range brass that has been tumbled and the primer pocket cleaned. Ive found that Win LPP tend to either seat to loose in the pocket or are too big to fit. Most of the problem seating seems to be in once fired Win brass as well. Overall about 9/100 have this problem. Out of 1000 primers thats 90/1000 that don’t work. I mostly use CCI LPP and have had ZERO problems. For price and quality Ill stick with CCI.