Just my opinion, but I think primer ignition is more dependent on strike SPEED than anything else.
My basis; No matter how dented you make an uncrushed(far from fully seated), loose primer, it is less likely to go off. You could crush it in a vice, or deprime hot, without ignition. As long as you don't do it fast!
I have squeezed a primer until it is completely flatened in a seater to see if it would go off. Destroyed it alright, but No bang..
With this, I assume a quicker pin strike, whether from travel or lower mass, would better assure ignition.
How consistent this ignition is, other than assured, is beyond any notion from me now.
But I'm gearing up to find out..
One of my guns just opened in grouping. Nothing extreme, but ugly. My ammo and barrel prep is checklist, leaving only scope, bolt, or bedding.
When I checked the bolt I found that the setscrew holding the pin in the catchey-thing had failed to do it's job. This allowed pin travel to vary from shot to shot. Interesting though was that every primer ignited, and had seemingly identical dimples.
Anyway, I resolved the problem, and now I'm grouping better, but not as good as usual. It seems my primer ignition has taken a new charactor with my current pin travel setting. It's as if I had changed primers, and will need to adjust the load, or the crush I seat primers to.
Well, when Snowmageddon ends!