Nessmuk, the process is simple and tedious and requires either machining ability or money.
you can either make your own die and anvil on a lathe very simply out of mild steel. or purchase a tap o cap or similar product here
http://22lrreloader.com/store/the mix they sell here for the priming compound I have used for percussion caps for my inlines, cap& ball revolvers, and boxer primers for pistol and small rifle primers.
priming compounds need a few things,
they need an:
initiator- primary explosive that is impact or friction sensitive.
a fuel source- unburned media (when making black powder using charcoal its the unburned cellulose that burns not the carbon. if you sub pure carbon for charcoal it burns slowly instead of explode/deflagrate rapidly)
oxygen/ oxidizer- for the flame to breath its short life.
heavy metal carrier/slag element- to carry your heat into your secondary explosive/fuel
in the mix sold at 22 reloader is: lead styphnate - an initiator/ heavy metal slag. sulfur - an initiator/fuel. potassium nitrate- oxidizer. ground glass- friction modifier to trigger the lead styphnate & sulfur.
this creates a weak priming compound by itself. here are some substances that you can substitute in to make it hotter or just becasue its what you have available.
silver fulminate - initiator ( snappers- water soluble)
red phosphorus- initiator (strike anywhere match head and the red sandpaper like material on regular matches)
iron oxide -heavy metal slag/ mild oxidizer (anywhere from buildings to underside of cars)
lead azide - initiator/ heavy metal slag. hard to find hard to sythesize
powdered sugar - fuel needs a larger oxidizer amount to function well
nitro-cellulose powders - fuel I treat west system # 403 micro fibers into a gun cotton powder. medium difficulty to make. VERY POTENT its very close to single base smokeless powder. just without all the modifiers to slow down the burn. not impact sensitive enough for primers but can be set off by static. coat this with graphite powder to mitigate handling risks from static.
nitro-cellulose adhesives& finishes - useful as a clean burning binder for caps and a coating for primers. order from any specialtly shop. common in the archery fletching and instrument finishes, duco cement works well too.
I mostly just do the sugested mix for the prime all compound. but I do a 50/50 red phosphorus sulfur mix to make it flash hotter and use diluted nitrocelulose adhesive to seal the compound into whatever im working on.
Use this info at your own risk. wear gloves, resperator and face shield when working with these in any amount.