Ok, I’ll be the sucker here.
I’ve detonated a 9mm primer twice. Once on my 1050 while cycling the press by hand very fast. An already primed case Somehow made it into the case feeder and was deprimed very quickly by the Dillon de prime/resize due, and donated. I always wear eyes and ears when reloading, no damage, nothing just a loud pop. Even the depriming pin was fine.
2nd was on my automated Mark 7 with the original shuttle base priming system, again cycling very fast (2700 rounds per hour fast) during primer seating. Again just a loud pop, no damage, and I have to assume it was because there was some debris in the path that mimicked an impact on the anvil of the primer. It happened in the first several thousand rounds of using the system and has not happened since, now well over 150,,000 rounds beyond that point.
The friend to whom I sold my 1050 who uses it by hand said he lit one off in the priming station and it sent the entire primer stack through the ceiling embedding the plastic rod into the drywall of the ceiling and made a VERY loud noise.
An experienced employee of a prominent gun store in Mesa AZ that shall go nameless (cough...CZ...cough) shared a similar story.
So it happens, and the people to whom it happens are less likely to admit that they had it happen than someone is to admit that they’ve never had it happen. Kind a like sexually transmitted diseases I guess. Huh. Wear eyes and some type of ears whilst you reload. Learn from your mistakes. Not saying I’m proud of it happening to me, but the backup strategies worked (eyes, ears, I had no secondary detonations because these press designs reduce that risk, the guy that did just had to fix his ceiling and explain some stuff to his wife).
There. I outed myself. Nanner nanner. Roast me.
C