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Hornaday Bullet Puller Failure

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7 comments

  • ammo guy
    Ran into the same problem with this puller, contact Hornady and they will replace the necessary parts free. I have found you need to lightly lube the moving part to keep it from seizing.
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  • rufe-snow
    I also have a cam actuated bullet puller. Don't recall the maker? As I haven't used it for awhile, and it's in storage. It's the model that requires a different collet. For different diameter bullets.

    Have had good luck with it, and it has stood up. Much easier to use, than the older models. That required a wrench to tighten the collet, on each individual bullet.

    I'll dig through my stash. If it's not made by Hornady? I 'll let you know. Maybe another manufacturer, makes a more durable model?
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  • Kenneth Stuart
    I initially used the RCBS bullet puller with the collets and it worked fine but kind of slow. So I tried the impact inertia type and managed to break it after using it a few hundred times. Finally, I decided to go back to the RCBS bullet puller even though you do have to use the different sized collets - much better choice.
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  • chiefr
    Think I have or used almost every type there is. Kinetic, collet, camming and none are perfect and they all are slow. Still have RCBS, CH, HDY, and several impact types.

    Lately I purchased a GRIP-N-PULL which I am having great success with. Can pull a mess of bullets faster than the rest. The only shortfall I can see is it requires considerable strength to hold heavily crimped bullets.

    Do a search for GRIP-N-PULL bullet puller and check it out. I do not know how to post a link.
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  • FEENIX
    quote:Originally posted by chiefr
    Think I have or used almost every type there is. Kinetic, collet, camming and none are perfect and they all are slow. Still have RCBS, CH, HDY, and several impact types.

    Lately I purchased a GRIP-N-PULL which I am having great success with. Can pull a mess of bullets faster than the rest. The only shortfall I can see is it requires considerable strength to hold heavily crimped bullets.

    Do a search for GRIP-N-PULL bullet puller and check it out. I do not know how to post a link.


    I too have the http://grip-n-pull.com/ and it works as advertised. It does leave a light mark on some of the bullets pulled but still serviceable.

    Grip-N-Pull_zps1fr50sg1.jpg
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  • Okie743
    quote:Originally posted by spirits
    I initially used the RCBS bullet puller with the collets and it worked fine but kind of slow. So I tried the impact inertia type and managed to break it after using it a few hundred times. Finally, I decided to go back to the RCBS bullet puller even though you do have to use the different sized collets - much better choice.
    Hornady and RCBS will replace your worn out broken stuff FREE, even if you are not the original first time owner.

    That is why I buy their products.
    They will also send you free replacement collets (which wear out) for their inertia pullers. I also use the RCBS collet bullet puller, but I prefer the inertia so as the bullet are not distorted.
    I've test fired distorted bullets that were pulled with the collet type RCBS puller and was surprised that they still grouped good.
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  • tsr1965
    I have an old RCBS kinetic puller, that has disassembled hundreds of rounds for use of component's, and a good many mistakes...it is still going strong. Learn how to use it, and it will not break. It must be able to bounce when it strikes a hard surface, so don't gorilla grip it.
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