The fastest way to use a CPS is by loading tubes with a Vibra-Prime, the DAA thingy, or the Dillon RF-100 (which is like $425 for those CPS owners who wish to continue overpaying for stuff). Incidentally, that’s also the fastest way to fill tubes for a Dillon 550 (which is cheaper than a CPS and I believe does a couple other things besides just prime cases).
I’m starting to wonder if any of those proselytizing the way of the $600 CPS have ever even tried the $60 Frankford tool before claiming the CPS is superior?
Whenever one of these threads pops up it seems like the “CPS fans” jump all over everyone else (really just me honestly) claiming how it’s worth every penny of $600, and how the rest of us are idiots for not accepting that “fact”.
But having used a CPS a bunch, they’re really not that special. The only thing I can guess is that the old priming tool guys’ were using before must have been super duper shitty!?
I have the 21st Century hand primer and I had the FA hand primer and a vibra prime, and when I was a teenager I had the Lee hand primer. It took 3 vibra primes before I got one that worked. It is my opinion that the CPS is faster than any of them. I already have a Dillon primer tube filler to feed my 1050, so purely from a production standpoint the CPS is hands down faster in my room than any other option. Note that I’m not making any argument about consistent depth, crush, etc. I‘m simply saying the CPS is faster, and that matters a lot to me when I’m prepping 400 pieces of rifle brass at a time or more. It’s the same logic behind why I have two auto-tricklers.