Skip Sackett
US Veteran
I have a ton of reloading/handloading manuals. Not as many as some but quite a few. I enjoy just getting them down and reading the articles over and over. Browse through the data for cartridges I load and compare notes and .................... boring to some I suppose.
One thing with the advent of the Internet though, accessibility. Powder companies are putting their data on the web for free and there are tons of other sources that have their information free as well.
This one though, you have to pay for. http://www.loaddata.com
I have to tell you this, in my opinion, it is well worth it. There are load tests from the other magazines that Wolfe publishes and they are grouped by caliber. You can go to one site and fine a load for a revolver, rifle or shotgun. When you pull the data up it is informative and has special notes concerning it's development.
If you get a subscription, you can even get a free binder to put the loads in that you want for reference any time you load.
I thought it was over priced to start with until I bought my last manual and saw what was in it. This is a bargain, again, in my opinion.
Take for example my current needs. I want to find some 357Mag loads for a Marlin 1894 with a 158gr Hornady XTP or Remington JSPHP for a hog/ram hunting trip that the wife and I are going on in the middle of this month. Presto! One click of a button and I find loads that were tested both for performance and accuracy in a firearm similar to the one I am loading for. The references are there as well and with folks like Bryan Pearce, John Haviland, Mike Venutrino and others.
At any rate, I was just wondering if anyone else used this site to gather information besides my self.
One thing with the advent of the Internet though, accessibility. Powder companies are putting their data on the web for free and there are tons of other sources that have their information free as well.
This one though, you have to pay for. http://www.loaddata.com
I have to tell you this, in my opinion, it is well worth it. There are load tests from the other magazines that Wolfe publishes and they are grouped by caliber. You can go to one site and fine a load for a revolver, rifle or shotgun. When you pull the data up it is informative and has special notes concerning it's development.
If you get a subscription, you can even get a free binder to put the loads in that you want for reference any time you load.
I thought it was over priced to start with until I bought my last manual and saw what was in it. This is a bargain, again, in my opinion.
Take for example my current needs. I want to find some 357Mag loads for a Marlin 1894 with a 158gr Hornady XTP or Remington JSPHP for a hog/ram hunting trip that the wife and I are going on in the middle of this month. Presto! One click of a button and I find loads that were tested both for performance and accuracy in a firearm similar to the one I am loading for. The references are there as well and with folks like Bryan Pearce, John Haviland, Mike Venutrino and others.
At any rate, I was just wondering if anyone else used this site to gather information besides my self.