Re: priming tool suggestions for a newB
<span style="font-style: italic">"Didn't mean to diss the Lee, it's just that he said he had a couple incidents of primers going off with that particular tool."</span>
You didn't and we knew that; you simply repeated what you've been told. We're just telling you that we believe what you was told is unjustified.
It appears those who have broken the levers on Lee's Autoprime tools must use Tim Taylor's mechanical assembly solution; when something won't go together easily, Tim likes to use "more power!" But that's really NOT a good solution to difficulty, it's much better to stop and check out WHY things aren't working normally than to lean on something like that obviously thin lever. Most of the time the problem is a sideways primer OR a crimped GI primer pocket and both have to be corrected before continuing anyway. And I just can't imagine putting enough finger pressure on that little Lee finger lever to bust the "dog bone" (toggle link) without checking for what's wrong; seems some people REALLY NEED a solid steel handpriming tool!
So far as someone setting off a primer with a kernel of media in the pocket goes, it's hard to see that being a legitimate priming tool "defect" no matter who made the tool.
Lee's modified (short) primer shell holders are simplier/quicker to exchange than others I've seen that use press shell holders. That makes the shell holder types a personal preference issue rather than a real mechanical advantage or disadvantage but I like working with Lee's very simple primer shell holders much better!
I'm a 'test everything (carefully) for myself' guy. Thus, I've loaded thousands of the Federal primers I prefer in both of my two Lee "pot metal" AutoPrimes (large and small) without incident over the last 25 or so years. So, I doubt Lee's Federal caution is linked to any serious safety problem. But ... YMMV.