Damn tourists must have been playing some of that RAP stuff!
That will teach them!
Nah, I was mad because he made spit my chew all over his windshield when he hit me......


Damn tourists must have been playing some of that RAP stuff!
That will teach them!
Then the answer to your question is "No.".
QUOTE]
I'm not sure how this can be, as I stated up thread that a current manual shows 20gr of 2400 with their 210JHP as being within SAAMI specs. A JHP is going to produce more pressure than the Keith designed H&G #258 cast bullet with same charge of 2400 which Keith often recommended. BTW I'm not planning on loading any of these loads up as I already have a good load for my .41 mag. I had to stop as I reached my recoil threshold before I got to the maximum published load.
However like ChuckS1 stated it is fun to learn about the guns and loads that got us to where we are today.
Loved reading Elmer's various books and articles. That being said, I do not consider him a qualified reference for loading. Even in his day, he had no access to any instrumentation by which to verify anything about the loads he developed. I appreciate his work, etc. But when it comes to reloading, there is no substitute for current information that has been pressure tested, etc.
Nah, I was mad because he made spit my chew all over his windshield when he hit me......![]()
If you want to avoid that rundown feeling, quit playing in the street.Larry
Are you asking about all his loads or just the ones you listed above?I'm not sure how this can be,...
... Elmer Keith blew up a lot of guns? I've read this in lots of internet posts but not in Elmer's writings-- He did blow up a .45 Colt using rifle bullets and black powder....
Sir, Keith blew up at least two SA .45s: the one you mention (300-grain bullet with 35 grains of black powder) and another with a heavy charge of No. 80 assembled by a fellow who worked for Belding and Mull. Seems like Keith mentioned at least one other in "Sixguns," but I can't bring it to mind right now. I wouldn't call two or three guns "a lot," but the guy did blow up more than one in his experiments. And frankly, even one would seem like altogether too many if it were one of my guns.
Hope this helps, and Semper Fi.
Ron H.
Elmer also stated that he did not recommend the use of No. 80 in handguns then, either. He claimed 2400 worked far better. So, if we're going by the loads that he claimed worked well and recommended, I'd say they're still good.
I shoot Keith loads in my .357s and .44s with my own cast bullets, and they work well for me.
He did have access, he sent his .44 SPL loads containing 17gr of 2400 to H.P. Whites laboratory where the round tetsted at 25,000 PSI. Brian Pearce snet some of his .44 SPL keith loads to the same laboratory when he wrote the article about the Ruger FT .44 Specials. They found that Brians' loads created the same 25,000 PSI.
Here is some more food for thought. I posted this on another forum to get a broad depth of replies and insight. Anyway a feller' pressure tested Keiths' .44 mag mag load (22gr 2400 with RCBS 250gr K bullet) over his Ohler M43 and got close to 33,000 PSI in his particular revolver. He also tetsted 3 different lots of Alliant 2400 and got no more than SD than is common in lot to lot variation.