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CCI PRIMER 209 MUZZLE- LOADING 2000/CASE

(20 customer reviews)

$203.99

 

FEATURES
-Specially designed for in-line muzzle loading use
-Meets individualized needs of muzzleloader users
-Easier to seat than ever before
-1000/PACK
-5 PACKS/CASE

Additional Information

SKU 50029465003079
Manufacturer CCI
Additional Freight Charge (Hazardous  + shipping)Add $20.00
QUANTITY PER PACK 100
PACKS PER CASE 10
HAZARDOUS Y
PACK NEC (KG) 0.0000
CASE NEC (KG) 0.1200
Dimension 5.75 X 8.45 X 13.05
Height 5.7500
Width 8.4500
Length 13.0500
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Description

>Description<

Firstly, The CCI™ 209 Inline MZL™ primers utilize modern, non-corrosive, and non-mercuric initiator mixes to ensure a clean burn and absolute ignition. shotgun primers, primers for sale, rifle primers, automotive primers, cci small pistol primers,

Secondly, These CCI™ Primers are constantly being tested and meticulously improved for field and target loads in all gauges.

Thirdly, today’s CCI primers are more sensitive, easier to seat, and more compatible with progressive and automated loading equipment than ever before.

Also, They utilize modern non-corrosive and non-mercuric initiator mixes for the cleanest burn possible.

For the cleanest burn possible, try the CCI 209 Inline Shotshell Primers. cci small pistol primers

>There are some common questions being asked by clients and these questions are;<

What are 209 shotshell primers used for?

The 209 primers are perfect for trap shooting or use with your favorite muzzleloader.

Is there a difference in 209 primers?
Further, there is no magic solution and any generic 209 will work,
just at different power levels which affect velocity, blowback, recoil, and fouling for your specific load.
What primers do muzzleloaders use?
Moreover, Some inline muzzleloaders can use #11 or musket caps, but the 209 primer is by far the most popular.
Again, It produces the hottest flame of the bunch and is ideal for igniting black powder substitutes.
So, I recommend using some sort of 209 primer where doing so is legal. automotive primers

>Are there any 209 primers available?<

Furthermore, CCI® Shotshell Primers provide reliable, clean-burning performance for any modern shell with a 209 primer pocket.
The 209 primers are excellent for standard field and target loads, while the 209M is ideal for heavy waterfowl and turkey loads.
>Are Wolf 209 primers good?<
The answer is Yes, I have been using Wolf 209 primers for many years, probably shot close to 300,000.
They are a great primer, easy on firing pins. primers for sale
Very few misfires had more Remington factory ammo misfires than that of Wolf.
Why are all primers out of stock?
Simply because Demand is more than supply.  Simply put, consumer demand continues to outpace our ability to supply.”
Again, Ammunition Shortage Impacts Primer Supply. Buy shotgun primers Online now.
Lastly, Rifle and pistol primers are nearly sold out everywhere, with some less-than-reputable vendors now charging 4-5 times the normal price.

>What is the cleanest muzzleloader powder?<

Blackhorn 209 produces some of the highest velocities out of all available black powder substitutes.

Additionally, it’s very consistent in performance, which really aids accuracy.

It’s also non-corrosive and is by far the cleanest burning black powder substitute.

Why is there a 209 primer shortage?

According to the National Shooting Sports Foundation,

the reason for the shortage was due to hoarding by shooters and the same may be true with primers and other reloading components today

20 reviews for CCI PRIMER 209 MUZZLE- LOADING 2000/CASE

  1. Troy

    Ammo Store was one of the only places who had in stock the old caps for black powder firearms. So many people have switched to the in-line muzzleloader with the 209 primers which is great but I needed the old caps for a Ruger Old Army which I inherited from my Father and there they were, ready to ship. Also I ordered 10mm ammo which is getting tough to find and not only did they have 10mm ammo but a great variety to choose from. EXCELLENT!!!!

  2. Noel Barlau

    Absolutely fascinating, and excellent timing! Please include as much detail as possible, and if this works out for you I’m sure there would be much interest in a brass casings test as well.

  3. bill65761

    Clamp the copper with the outer edge of the die first. Continue the stroke to form the completed draw and then cut the part free from the strip. So, a heavy spring holds the part in place while it is being drawn. The drawing cavity is supported by an even heavier spring, rendering it immobile until near the end of the stroke. At that time it gives way, allowing the shearing edges to do their thing. A small pin under a light spring load in the center of the first part of the die (concave side of the part) then pushes the finished part off the die. At the beginning of the stroke, when it first encounters the material, the spring will not offer enough resistance to affect the material, but after the part has been formed and is cut free from the strip, it will be enough to push the finished part off the forming die, where it would otherwise cling as if electroplated on. The stripper pin should NOT be a close-tolerance fit … .020 wiggle is good … because you want to prevent a vacuum from forming on the back of the part.

    Clamp.
    Form.
    Punch.
    Eject.

    Full soft copper is so malleable that you can start with stock that is already nearly the finished thickness. Make the clearance on the shearing edges 1/3 the thickness of the material per side. IE .030″ material needs .010″ clearance. Make the punch .020″ smaller than the die. You may be able to tighten that up a few thousandths, but those numbers will get you close enough to make parts. You WANT the material to fracture, leaving a compression line on each side of a fracture zone. When those three zones are equal, you have the clearance between the punch and die right.

    I can’t give you the weights on the springs, sorry but I never got that far, but think in terms of valve lifter springs. You can drop one spring inside another to get more resistance, if needed.

  4. Jim Burns, Jr

    Great stuff Sir, thank you for my order. I would like to see anything you think would be helpful to anyone trying to learn a related trade or hobby. People who really like this kind of work aren’t generally the sort to call it boring or wasted thought / experience. I very much appreciate your investment of energy in the endeavor of inspiring the community to learn and build; genuinely first class.

  5. Jim Fleming

    I wish I’d’ve found your websitel about two years sooner! I know you’ve had a lot of comments on the series, but I just hope you’ve gone into exhaustive detail about making bullet jackets. I have a small, and very old Craftsman bench lathe, but it’d work great for making the dies the way you’ve got them set up here. I like it, and I like it a lot! (Your series, on making jacket drawing dies, I mean.) I have a hand press that has lots of the muscle that’s needed for moving metal. This is actually exciting for me!

  6. Hans Jim

    Thank you. I want to learn how to draw smaller stuff. My goal is to draw cups for making primers for rifles and pistols and to draw brass for making rim fire rounds. Starting with 22 long rifle, but I would also like to be able to draw cases for 41 Swiss Rim Fire. The most important by far are the cups for primers. I do not have a machine shop. So far I have been making dies for swaging 22 long rifle bullets (no jackets) and dies for sizing the brass for 22 LR. I use a drill press and a dremel with diamond bits for machining.

  7. bluehands

    I’m up for the detail too. I’m looking forward to see if and how you incorporate any extraction into the punch. I was wondering about maybe putting and extra stepped diameter or two into your punch….that way, when you cut and press it the first time, you wouldn’t have to extract it from the female die, just change the male die and press it again. Maybe do all the stepped pressing but the final so that it could be controlled a bit better?

  8. Josh Fleming

    People with their salty comments about how could this guy buy 7,000 primers when there is a shortage and he will never shoot that in a lifetime. That is only 7,000 rounds, (assuming you have ample powder) which could be 100 rounds at the range a session. I burn that easy. And assuming if he goes shooting 7 days out of the month would be 700, and in 10 months is 7,000. Hardley a lifetime. And not to mention, this is America. Where if you work hard to afford the things you want, and if they are in low supply, you put in the effort to find them, then you can have them. Always amazes me that some people think because they can’t have something, someone who does have it is wrong. That they are owed something. Save your money, do your research, check your local shops, online, shops out of town, be willing to trade, be willing to pay a little extra. Don’t just sit there and complain.

  9. Zane Snear

    Now I know why I can’t find any Winchester primers you bought em all lol

  10. Silas Longshot

    Brass we can collect & recycle. Bullets we can cast our own from scrap wheel weights (good luck finding 209 primers on this site). We can even make shitty black powder from tricking up charcoal. But without primers we’re screwed. Yeah, some can ‘recycle’ primers with match heads and other compounds, but the best you can do is one, two or more of every 10 made will be misfires, slow fires or no fires at all. One of these putting a bullet halfway down the barrel of your weapon, the next full fire round may blow up your gun right in your face. So in my opinion, the deliberate games with the primer situation (and ammo) for public consumption is to keep us from continuing to gear up for what so many of us expect to happen before long.

  11. Jab Myarm

    When it comes to primers, there is obviously an oligopoly controlling supply in the United States. An oligopoly occurs when only a handful of manufacturers control the market. A capitalist system is supposed to be defined by free-market competition, but when only a couple manufacturers control the market, as we have with this Olin and Vista primer oligopoly, then that is just one step shy of communism, i.e., total control. Any chance I get, my primers from now on will be bought from foreign suppliers, preferably Fiocci. Olin and Vista brands are off my list. Likewise if a new primer manufacturer comes into the U.S. market and breaks up the oligopoly, as appears may soon be the case with Lone Star out of Texarkana, Texas (within the year).

  12. Henrik

    Have you all missed there is component shortages? And im not talking primers and powder, im talking copper, steel, iron..
    Have several companies that has had to fire up to 25% of their personell due to supply of raw materials. And this is not large industries, these are the “mom and pop” with 50-100 employes, working primary in wood and steel (furniture and stuff for houses like doors).

    Anyone here in to electronics (computers) can tell you how hard certain items are to get hands on, mostly due to stuff getting stuck on freight boats from china – affected by lockdowns in harbors due to covid spread etc.

  13. Ken

    Not sure I buy this. I see pistol and rifle primers for sale all the time. Not a large selection, but they’re available. Not so for shotgun primers. They are nowhere to be found. If the manufacturers are hoarding primer, you’d think that would hoard them all and not just 209s

  14. thastinger345

    Profit margin is higher for Vista to sell a completed round of ammo than it is for them to sell the most critical component needed for one to be able to make it themselves. The whole “new gun owners” causing it is complete BS, they didn’t buy 30 Carbine and 25-06 guns and you can’t find that stuff.

    It has always been that the primers that show up on shelves are the left overs from the batch run.

  15. Brax barrett

    Really good source is close friends with employe at federal. He said there warehouse is so full of primers its nuts it’s never been that full. But a buddy of mine claims there stocking to fill military contracts. I can see that as every country is talking about going to war right now over dumb shit as most wars are.

  16. Bees toe

    I’ll bet the Leftist bastards have bought out CCI and other major manufacturers of primers with the taxpayers dollars they are stealing from us. You are 100% correct. but it is not about JUST raising prices, it is about total control over all things firearms. My local outlets have not received ANY shipments of primers for over 6 months! That is not a demand issue, that is a SUPPLY issue!!!

  17. Bees toe

    I am starting to think that the “Dems” are getting some form of gun control by limiting reloading component availability. Turning guns into baseball bats. Hmmmmm…….

  18. Carnage garage customs

    Yeah that’s the hardest thing to find is primers I’m newly in to the reloading and that’s the hardest thing to find I got lucky on some large rifle primers at Cabela’s but ever since nothing before that I looked into reloading my own primers still trying to master the technique and getting the optimal consistency of them but in my advice save all of your primers you can reload them if anything hits the fan start reloading your primers yourself there are people out there and companies that have kits to reload primers because of this this is a way that we can get around it to where they will lose money because we know how to reload them I love the video keep it up

  19. osulxa

    There is definitely some kind of strategy by the ammunition manufacturers. It’s no longer hoarding. Hoarding was over a year ago when every retailer put limits on how many boxes one can buy at a time. This a plan or strategy of some kind being implemented by the supply chain to gain more money. They are using covid, riots, governmental scare tactics to increase profits. Its called creating a false demand. I learned this Marketing 101 in college. Keep in mind Obama also closed down the last lead smelting plant in the U.S. by environmental regulation. All lead has to be imported by boat from South America. However, this doesn’t pertain to primers. Primers should be the cheapest to make.

  20. Joe Sebia

    Worked for a chemical company that made a specialty chemical for computer chip industry. We were the only domestic manufacturer. That chemical was sold for $300 per kg.
    To say we were gouging is an understatement. Well, soon competitors learned they can make the same chemical alot cheaper. More and more companies got in on the cash cow driving price down. Today the same chemical is under $15/kg.

    The laws of supply and demand are concrete. As a wise investor once told me. Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered.

    Had our company kept prices down, the complexities and hazards of making the chemical would have kept a lot of competitors out of the market.

    The same will hold true for these component mfg’rs if they are artificially keeping prices high by sand bagging production.

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