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Guns aren’t hard to make. Third world workshops and first world hobbyists routinely manufacture firearms using both common and exotic materials, by methods as varied as simple hammering all the way up to 3D printing. Many who promote gun control understand the ease of firearms production and suggest that ammunition is the best “choke point” for disarming civilians. They operate under the assumption that ammunition is difficult to make. Like so much about guns, they’re wrong.

Projectiles have been made in the billions by hobbyists for hundreds of years. Ammunition cartridge cases can be reused a hundred times or more, and they’re not terribly difficult to manufacture. Gunpowder can certainly be made at home easily enough.

Ah, but what about primers? As wikipedia.org informs:

In firearm ballistics, the primer (/ˈpraɪmər/) is a component of pistol, rifle, and shotgun rounds. Upon being struck with sufficient force, a primer reacts chemically to produce heat which ignites the main propellant charge and fires the projectile.

There have always been a few dedicated hobbyists who have recharged primers. Before the internet, that information didn’t make it into the mainstream. During the Cold War, I knew of Soviet hunters who recharged their shotgun primers with the tips of strike-anywhere matchheads. That method is detailed in the Army manual on improvised munitions, TM 31-210, page 297. The problem is it’s slow and labor intensive. It takes several minutes to recharge a single primer.

The Tap-O-Cap is a tool that was made by Forster. It can make usable percussion caps from aluminium drink cans and cap gun roll caps. Recharging primers is now, again, a thing. That’s as a hundred million additional firearms have been added to the U.S. private stock since Mr. Obama assumed office.

At the same time, consumers bought and stockpiled perhaps, by some estimates, a hundred billion rounds of ammunition. Reloading supplies, including primers, became scarce as demand skyrocketed — along with prices.

A great many Americans “suddenly” want to reload. On several forums on the internet, sophisticated and knowlegable enthusiasts began exploring the possibility of recharging percussion caps and primers.

The results have been extraordinary. There’s now a thriving community of hobbyists (e.g., castboolits.gunloads.com) who share what works, what doesn’t, and how to obtain or make the necessary materials to make, reload or recharge primers and percussion caps. There are, of course, plenty of Youtube videos on making percussion caps and recharging primers.

Safety precautions have to be followed. My estimate of the risk is about the same as the hobby of reloading cartridges. It’s less dangerous than scuba diving, sky diving, or horseback riding. The materials aren’t hard to acquire and can be made from common household chemicals. It’s easier to purchase them directly.

Because the amounts of priming compound necessary to recharge primers are tiny, small amounts of chemicals are sufficient for thousands of primers. One pound (454 grams) is sufficient for between 14,000 and 23,000 primers. A small pistol primer takes about .3 grains of priming compound; a large pistol primer requires about .5 grains. There are 7,000 grains in a pound, or 15.4 grains in one gram. Do the math.

W. Marshall Thompson, PhD has created a course that offers the best instruction for recharging primers and percussion caps. The course developed by Marshall Thompson is available for free download at this link.

As a seasoned academic, Dr. Thompson researched the published material before he created the course. He has several years of practical experience in doing what he explains. His work is wonderfully detailed and complete. It offers several methods for recharging primers and two variations, with less detail, for creating percussion caps.

The course starts by discussing the history of primers and the requirements for a successful primer. It discusses the basic legal issues. Then it goes into the details of how to recharge primers if you have the desire and/or the necessity of doing so.

In a forum, Marshall has acknowledged that recharging primers is not economic when commercial primers are readily available. That is not the point, he says. If the knowledge is available now, and people develop the skills now, it will be available when and where it is needed. It is extremely satisfying to create and/or reload your own primers from basic materials.

Here are the four most practical methods for recharging primers:

1. The cap gun roll cap method

This is the easiest method, and works fairly well for pistol cartridges that use fast burning powder. The primers made with this method may not be energetic enough for reliable ignition of slow burning rifle powders.

Marshall lists which cap gun caps are the best. He details the procedure of recharging the primer cups. He diagrams how to recharge the primers with the caps. With practice, a couple of primers a minute can be produced. These primers are corrosive.

Marshall’s son in law recently tested 50 9mm cartridges.  The cartridges were loaded with cap gun roll cap primers three years ago.  They all functioned as normal reloaded cartridges.  There were no failures to fire or feed.

2. The strike-anywhere match head method (detailed in TM-31-210)

It produces a bit more energetic primers, but is much slower to use. It requires about 5-10 minutes for each completed primer. These primers are corrosive.

3. Duplicate the priming compounds used by the U.S. Army before, during, and after WWI

These priming compounds are very energetic, very stable, and have an extremely long shelf life. They are corrosive. They are not hard to produce, requiring only 3-6 components (there are minor variations).

The components are mixed dry, in small batches of 2 grams or less, for reasons of safety. The priming mixture is moistened after it is loaded into the primer cup. Then the anvil is installed. The primers produced with this method are very close to commercial primers for reliability and shelf life. Careful production of primers can be done at the rate of almost one a minute.

The primary chemicals used for the U.S. Army compounds are potassium chlorate (KClO3), antimony sulfide (commonly known as stibnite, Sb2S3), sulfur, ground glass, sodium bicarbonate (baking powder), and powdered aluminum.

Perfectly good primers can be made with just the first three materials. The others are used to assist in long term stability and ignition of slow powders. A dilute varnish/water/alcohol solution is commonly used to wet the mixture and as a binder. Combining the chemicals and assembling the primers is a simple recipe based process that does not involve any chemistry.

4. Create your own precursor chemicals

The advantage of the method is that it produces excellent quality, non-corrosive primers. If you attempt this method, you need some basic wet chemistry skills, about the level of a senior high school or college freshman chemistry class.

This method requires the manufacture of precursor chemicals that aren’t easily purchased in normal commercial channels, to make non-corrosive priming compound.  The precursor chemicals involve some risk, so the wet chemistry synthesis procedures need to be followed strictly.

Once the precursor chemicals are created, the recharging of the primers duplicates an old Ely priming method (whose patent has expired). The synthesis of the actual priming compound occurs in the priming cup, after the dry mix has been moistened. The priming compound is activated as it dries out, making this one of the safest methods for placing the priming compound in the cup.

The dry mix is not very sensitive. It can be  produced from the synthesized chemicals with a fair degree of safety. It can be stored safely in small batches. After the dry mix is produced, recharging the primers takes a little over a minute each. Simple small batch methods may help increase production, but safety requires that no more than a dozen or two primers be recharged per batch.

The recharging/reloading, or even manufacturing of primers is well within the capability of the average hobbyist. Two years ago, I would have thought it impractical to the point of impossibility. Now I know better. It is information that deserves a wide audience. Marshall Thompson, PhD, and anonymous Internet publishers deserve much credit for their efforts.

©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
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33 COMMENTS

  1. In imagining long-term survival scenarios, smokeless powder and primers are the two components of cartridges that I envision being hard to replace. Bullets can be cast and cases can be reused over and over, but powder and primer require some chemistry, which isn’t necessarily trivial. It’s interesting to hear that it isn’t necessarily out of reach, either.

    • Smokeless powder is difficult but black powder isn’t quite as hard. There’s some videos online that show the process.

      • Yeah, I know I guy that routinely makes black powder. You can’t run semi-autos on black powder, though, and a lot of the stock that’s out there would not be usable if black powder was all we had.

        • You can stretch smokeless powder with Ammonpulver (finely ground Ammonium Nitrate and charcoal). It burns clean, but is hard to ignite and is extremely corrosive. You need a booster charge of smokeless to set the main Ammonpulver charge off. Then there is the little problem of a phase change at about 84 degrees F. That breaks up the crystal structure and turns powder into explosive after enough passes through that temperature regime. Not an ideal solution, but in a pinch… The Germans used it in WWI.

        • I’ve run plenty of .45acp reloaded with FFFg through a 1911, as well as 7.62x39mm reloaded with FFFg. It works, as expected. It doesn’t produce the same muzzle velocity of course, but it does function fine.

    • My local hardware store has KCl salt, Potassium Chloride, for $23 per 40 lb bag. Add 5 volts DC and some relatively simple apparatus, and that converts to 60 lbs of Potassium Chlorate, KClO3. 60 pounds of KCl03 is enough for over 2 million primers. You also need about 60 lbs of sulphur and some ground glass. I do not think we are going to be running out of primers in a long term survival situation. We probably will not run out of ammunition, unless it is a political problem.

    • While not semi-auto, a Remington Rolling Block is a great way to split the difference between smokeless and black powder. It eats both.

    • If it came down to having to manufacture my own primers and gunpowder, screw it.

      I guess I’ll be packing a crossbow then, if I’m still standing. Plus a short axe for close work and firewood.

      • If it comes down to that level, someone who is more comfortable with practical chemistry will be making the powder and primers and selling them or bartering them. Very few people in the 1800’s made their own gunpowder and percussion caps!

        We would have to fall a long way to reach that level!

      • Frank Sir, If you bring me a deer & a few rabbits and squirrels, say every month, I can provide you with reloaded primers and powder so you can keep your own rifle(s) working. Would a working long gun, be worth a bite to eat for a fellow veteran?? Negotiable.

    • This is all why I’m convinced I’ll be packing revolvers and lever-action rifles (in low velocity chamberings) in a post-apocalyptic scenario.

      • To be prepared, have some of both. Otherwise, the guys with ARs and Glocks will take your revolvers and levers once it becomes clear to them their ammo supply is running dry and is no replenishable…. In a bit of an inversion of the old saying, perhaps we will be using our semi automatics to fight our way to our old fashioned guns 🙂

  2. Good to learn something. I’ve had massive exposure to toxic chemicals (and was careless)…I do have a couple of buddies who reload as I’m just not up for chemistry class.

  3. Who/why would one play in the evil empire of the fascists at google? Save time and just box up every piece of paper and personal information in your life/home and ship it directly to the bastards.

  4. Forster Tap-O-Cap #11 Percusion Cap Maker “discontinued” at Midway. Perhaps they sold too many?

    • This fellow has the #11 cap maker, and also sells a package with the chemicals to make the ignition mix. He is quite friendly and was very helpful when I called him with a couple of questions. He also sells a jig for converting Berdan primer cases into boxer and one to allow you to resize and prime .22 rimfire cases. Last time I checked it cost as much for a box of 50 as a brick of 500 did a decade ago so I don’t shoot my .22s much.
      Check out his website.
      http://www.brassworldeshop.com/

  5. NO NO NO!!!!! NEVER EVER mix KClO3 with sulfur or antimony sulfide…. super sensitive and dangerous. Sulfur makes any mix with KClO3 super sensitive, to the point where you can rub it between two fingers and it will detonate, the crushed glass creates friction in the mix. and by using aluminum as the fuel you are making flash powder…. chlorate flash is super sensitive and powerful enough without adding sulfur….. STAY AWAY!!!!! 1 gram is enough to remove fingers.

    That said, as a cannoneer, i use about 30lbs of mother black a year, so needless to say i ball mill my own because 30 lbs of goex is not cost effective.

    • that mix with KClO4 would be ok, Perchlorate is not reactive with sulfur like chlorate is

    • Just the standard military priming compound for before, during, and a while after WWI. In fact, through most of WWII, I believe. The military loaded billions of rounds with the chlorate/sulfur/antimony sulfide mixes.

      Yes, it is sensitive. That is why it is mixed in very small quantities in a way so as not to create friction. It *has* to be sensitive to make a good primer. Yes, you most certainly do not handle one gram with your bare fingers. It would be the height of folly to handle 1/10th of a gram with your bare fingers. No one is implying that you do so.

  6. I figure if I run out of ammunition I would just resort to tactics from Ragnar Benson’s School of Mantrapping.

  7. I see alot of chlorate / sulfur mixes highlighted. Both mixed two moles of sulfur to one mole of perchlorate are and effective impact explosive, No containment needed for a good bang.The addition of premixed flash powder at a ratio of 3 parts flash to one part chlorate/ sulfur is much less sensitive , but it is still a finger eating bitch.The addition of sodium carbonate is made to deacidify the mix to reduce the chance of thermal or spontaneous detonation. Lime as CaO or Ca( CO3)2 works as well. The mix of Iron (III) oxide (red rust) and aluminum (500 mesh) also produces a usable impact explosive when chlorate or perchlorate oxidizers are added. The iron oxide aluminum mix is commonly known as thermite. The addition of flash to thermite at a 50/50 ratio makes a nice bang. There are hundreds of usable mixes for percussion caps. One of my favorites uses ammonium picrate and it is not corrosive, but it is very sensitive. Let caution be your guide. Test on an anvil in small quantities and wear hand, face ear protection.

  8. Method #4. Anyone know the chemicals used? Or know of chemicals that can be used? My grandfather is a high school chem teacher and was wondering if you at they were.

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