38SPL HV
Member
I recently purchased a couple of boxes of Federal’s LE 38 Special +P 158 gr LSWCHP (“38G”). There are many out there nowadays at good prices (less than round nose std velocity…checkout Recoil Gunworks for instance).
The Federal crimp is not too pronounced as Remington’s current FBI version…but the Federal bullet moves slightly from its crimp similar to how Remington’s version does when shooting out of a S&W 442 Airweight (checking every fifth unfired round…ten cycles (50 rd box) but never subjecting the fifth round in the cylinder more than the four shots proceeding it. I shot each fifth round separately). No chance of enough bullet jump to jam the cylinder…giving me confidence.
The Federal version from over four years ago would come awfully close to jamming things with significant bullet jump. If you look at the outside of the cases of Federal’s latest version they have what appears to be compression marks adjacent to where the bullets sits within …can they be compressing the cases to provide more neck tension for the bullets? The crimp is not much different from those I tested four + yrs ago…they must be doing something to keep the bullets from moving as much as they had previously. Federal load has no jump in a 4 inch revolver…probably designed for these larger revolvers instead of Airweight versions. It’s my standard load in 4 inch revolvers.
I’m long winded here but I would recommend Federal’s latest “FBI” round for snub noses. I guess you could put your own roll crimp into it as I did with my older versions but not really necessary unless you don’t want any movement whatsoever in the Airweight.
The Federal crimp is not too pronounced as Remington’s current FBI version…but the Federal bullet moves slightly from its crimp similar to how Remington’s version does when shooting out of a S&W 442 Airweight (checking every fifth unfired round…ten cycles (50 rd box) but never subjecting the fifth round in the cylinder more than the four shots proceeding it. I shot each fifth round separately). No chance of enough bullet jump to jam the cylinder…giving me confidence.
The Federal version from over four years ago would come awfully close to jamming things with significant bullet jump. If you look at the outside of the cases of Federal’s latest version they have what appears to be compression marks adjacent to where the bullets sits within …can they be compressing the cases to provide more neck tension for the bullets? The crimp is not much different from those I tested four + yrs ago…they must be doing something to keep the bullets from moving as much as they had previously. Federal load has no jump in a 4 inch revolver…probably designed for these larger revolvers instead of Airweight versions. It’s my standard load in 4 inch revolvers.
I’m long winded here but I would recommend Federal’s latest “FBI” round for snub noses. I guess you could put your own roll crimp into it as I did with my older versions but not really necessary unless you don’t want any movement whatsoever in the Airweight.
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