I would start at the upper end of your Lyman data. If I remember correctly, I didn't start to get good function with Unique and 125-gr until 4.6 or 4.7, and it wasn't super-reliable.
Laudable, but I advise people against talking while reloading. It's extremely easy to get distracted, and I can think of two or three kabooms personally known to me that happened with two people talking at a reloading bench.
However...
Most reasonable 9mm loads I've used hover around 66-75% case fill. If you've got a light on the case, it's very easy to check for no-charge, and a double-charge should be noticeable, although not to the point that I'd bet my fingers or eyes on it. For instance, some powder dispensers, when actuated around a turret press (and here I'm thinking of the Lee Auto-Disk) drop quite consistent charges. But if you fail to actuate the press and double-charge, you don't get two full charges, you get 1.5 or thereabouts.
What I'd look at is some team reloading. Forget the time and rounds per hour, and just look at doing stuff together--a single-stage is cheap and might be a ton of fun:
*Person A resizes and deprimes on the press, Person B uses a hand- or bench-mounted priming tool.
*Person A charges with a benchtop dispenser (I love my Lee Perfect Powder Measure), Person B seats bullets on the single-stage.
That way, you're splitting up the loading, everybody's doing something, and it's very easy to eyeball cases before seating bullets. Also might be neat for him/her to have their "own" reloading press, and I guarantee you'll find a use for it as well.
Unique works fine in 9mm, although I prefer Bullseye or Power Pistol, depending on the bullet. I still have hands.
AA#5 is great, but this is how you wind up with a loading bench like mine--seven or eight cartridges and sixteen different powders to load them with.
How did you manage to get Bullseye to not throw well?
Dahak said:one of my teenagers will sit with me for hours running the press and talking so I would pay a premium in order to reload.
Laudable, but I advise people against talking while reloading. It's extremely easy to get distracted, and I can think of two or three kabooms personally known to me that happened with two people talking at a reloading bench.
However...
Most reasonable 9mm loads I've used hover around 66-75% case fill. If you've got a light on the case, it's very easy to check for no-charge, and a double-charge should be noticeable, although not to the point that I'd bet my fingers or eyes on it. For instance, some powder dispensers, when actuated around a turret press (and here I'm thinking of the Lee Auto-Disk) drop quite consistent charges. But if you fail to actuate the press and double-charge, you don't get two full charges, you get 1.5 or thereabouts.
What I'd look at is some team reloading. Forget the time and rounds per hour, and just look at doing stuff together--a single-stage is cheap and might be a ton of fun:
*Person A resizes and deprimes on the press, Person B uses a hand- or bench-mounted priming tool.
*Person A charges with a benchtop dispenser (I love my Lee Perfect Powder Measure), Person B seats bullets on the single-stage.
That way, you're splitting up the loading, everybody's doing something, and it's very easy to eyeball cases before seating bullets. Also might be neat for him/her to have their "own" reloading press, and I guarantee you'll find a use for it as well.
That is do NOT use Unique for 9mm unless you hand weight every single charge thrown.
Unique works fine in 9mm, although I prefer Bullseye or Power Pistol, depending on the bullet. I still have hands.
AA#5 is great, but this is how you wind up with a loading bench like mine--seven or eight cartridges and sixteen different powders to load them with.
oysterer said:Another reason I stopped Bullseye too, not a bad powder per se but others are just way better. If you throw them and not weight them that is.
How did you manage to get Bullseye to not throw well?
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