• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Solved the percussion cap issue.

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Like many others here, I'm tired of being gouged for percussion caps and I've really gotten into the hobby with my new 1858 Remington and the NAA super companion cap and ball. The NAA actually works well with the red ring caps like you'd use on a child's cap gun but I had one go off as I was seating it.

So I started looking into making my own. I quickly found the prime all recipe and decided to go with that, although it's technically the FH42 compound. Then I started looking into what to use for cups. That tap o cap thing doesn't fulfill my ocd desires with the way they look so I decided to go the route of making my own die to punch and form them.

So in comes my three piece die that punches out the circle and then forms them around the die, leaving me with a perfect number 10 cup to be filled with my compound. It's hardened and tempered so it'll last.View attachment 298346View attachment 298347View attachment 298348View attachment 298349
This is awesome! Have you tried to fit them in a capper yet? That's the main thing I dont like about my homemade caps.
 
Like many others here, I'm tired of being gouged for percussion caps and I've really gotten into the hobby with my new 1858 Remington and the NAA super companion cap and ball. The NAA actually works well with the red ring caps like you'd use on a child's cap gun but I had one go off as I was seating it.

So I started looking into making my own. I quickly found the prime all recipe and decided to go with that, although it's technically the FH42 compound. Then I started looking into what to use for cups. That tap o cap thing doesn't fulfill my ocd desires with the way they look so I decided to go the route of making my own die to punch and form them.

So in comes my three piece die that punches out the circle and then forms them around the die, leaving me with a perfect number 10 cup to be filled with my compound. It's hardened and tempered so it'll last.View attachment 298346View attachment 298347View attachment 298348View attachment 298349
 
Way better than the Tapacap the don’t work with my capper.
 

Attachments

  • 7987D9A3-C368-4952-8075-94192688A5EF.jpeg
    7987D9A3-C368-4952-8075-94192688A5EF.jpeg
    741.9 KB
I'm trying to think of making one of these where you can make more than one cap at once. A punch to cut out round pieces of metal and then load them into the die and tighten it down in a vise , or tighten it down with a lever that uses threaded bolts on the die itskef and make like a half a dozen or 10 of them at once
 
Clearly there is significant interest in a die that can produce a cap which closely resembles the factory made #11 and #10's.
One that can be used in a reloading press would be my preference.
Actually, kinda hard to believe such a thing is not already available.
It actually is, you can order them from at least one company.
Last year I was trying to make some with a piece of equipment I had thought up of drilling a hole into a piece of railroad plate and then using a metal punch on a piece of aluminum to try and form the primer cap. It didn't work too good it was just making a mess out of the round piece of aluminum .
but when I searched online I found a company that makes a machine you can actually make large rifle primers for loading into things such as a 30-06 or 270 that sort of primer,
and one for making small rifle/small pistol primers and this company also has a piece of equipment for making percussion caps
 
Back
Top