at_liberty
Member
More puzzled than anything..........
Never heard the "throats too narrow for lead bullets" thing with any Smith revolver......the only "issue" I've ever heard is the "excessive use of hot .125gr .357s"
I think there are a few small J-frames that need semi-jacketed ammo...but IIRC that has to do with recoil, crimp and bullets becoming loose and binding the cylinder.
Only FMJ .357/38s.... I've seen is a .38 130 gr. load....... a very mild target load
I think there is/was a US military load 130gr FMJ .38 that is sometimes referenced in threads w/o a lot of enthusiasm.......
Can't imagine "carrying" a gun with FMJ ammo unless I had to ...... military and NJ......
just "puzzled" by you self imposing that kind of restriction on a Model 19.
Thought you might elaborate.............
I should have said "jacketed", for want of an acronym, since only the part that contacts the rifling matters, and that type of bullet is smaller in diameter than lead. Both my 36-1 and 19-4 will allow only jacketed bullets to be coaxed through the throats, and I don't want to do any avoidable gunsmithing/reaming with either one.
BTW one of my recent loading batches was 158 gr Armscor FMJ-RN bought through Dillon. They had no crimp grooves. I loaded them especially for the 36-1 for target. I would also use them on any S&W with EDM rifling, unsuitable for lead in my hands.
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