I was surfing through my ammo stash and came across a full green box of this 38 special ammo. This is a really heavy lead round for a 38 special. Box says "INDEX 5238". Any idea who and what Remington was looking to with this stuff?
During the 1970s all the shooting literature I read and shooters I knew called a specific 200 grain Speer JHP the flying ashtray because of its huge hollow point cavity. Speer manufactured bullets in Lewiston Idaho. One of the gun stores there bought Speer's seconds. The owner claimed most were just swept up off the floor but most of the ones I bought from him had a little lead on the outside of the jacket at the edge of their hollow point. I could not tell any difference in their accuracy. Along with other Speer seconds I bought flying ashtrays for 3 cents each.I might be wrong but I thought that 200 gr bullet was called.......
the flying ashtray ?? [...]
During the 1970s all the shooting literature I read and shooters I knew called a specific 200 grain Speer JHP the flying ashtray because of its huge hollow point cavity. Speer manufactured bullets in Lewiston Idaho. One of the gun stores there bought Speer's seconds. The owner claimed most were just swept up off the floor but most of the ones I bought from him had a little lead on the outside of the jacket at the edge of their hollow point. I could not tell any difference in their accuracy. Along with other Speer seconds I bought flying ashtrays for 3 cents each.
To put that price in historical context, a new 5" Model 27-2 was in the sore priced at $175.
BTW, 600 fps is more likely than 500 fps. It is difficult to give a bullet enough momentum to make it through the barrel and exit at only 500 fps.
During the 1970s all the shooting literature I read and shooters I knew called a specific 200 grain Speer JHP the flying ashtray because of its huge hollow point cavity.