First handloading effort

Pigirondan

Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2009
Messages
267
Reaction score
66
Location
California
Fifty .38 Special rounds. Remington brass, CCI 500 small pistol primers, 5 grains of Unique, 158 grain LSWC.

Going to the range on Monday. Will report back with resuts.
 
Register to hide this ad
Welcome to the club. My first reloads were 3.0 of Bullseye and a 158 gr LRN. That was almost 40 years ago and I am still at it.
 
Way to go! It will be hard to buy ammo now that you know what you can do and how accurate your own loads are, and the cost.
 
Since you say this is your first hand loading effort, I'm going to preach a little bit.

The loads you list are probably safe, but I will point out that you are .3 grain over Alliant's standard .38 load and .2 grains less than their max +P load.

It is very bad practice to pick a load at or near maximum and start with it. Reduce listed maximums 10% and work up (with a very few exceptions like H110 and W296). This is a standard safety practice, those that don't follow it do so at their peril.

Congrats for getting into the game!
 
Welcome to the world of reloading Pigirondan! You will never look back! As mentioned above, you are starting at the higher end with those loads. They will be fine in a .357 mag revolver, and probably OK in a +P rated gun, but I wouldn't shoot them in an old vintage Colt Detective Special.

Starting low and working your loads up is great advice from imashooter2. Buy yourself a chronograph if you really want to make yourself crazy! Different combinations of primer types, powder types, bullet styles and weights, brass types, and firearm types will just about make you nuts! You will eventually find some "pet" loads that will be incredibly accurate in your particular guns.

Best of luck, follow the load guides, be safe, and have a blast!


WG840
 
This is slightly off topic, but it has to do with beginning to reload. I started about 4 months ago and have reloaded about 500 handgun shells. I had what I assume to be the standard type of beginner problems, but for the most part all the reloads functioned properly. My learning curve seemed to be steeper than it should have been because I couldn't find any decent information on reloading operations. The information I did find deals with theory, how to set up a press, what the actual operations do and the importance of accurate load data, but I leaves the impression that all you have to do is fall off a turnip truck, buy a press and ou're ready to reload. I didn't find anything that deals with common beginner mistakes-- like not checking cleaned cases closely enough to make sure they're free of media, checking to ensure that primers feed properly, making sure primers are properly seated. I also didn't find any mention of things like paying attention to the feel of the handle when you insert a primer and the fact that with a progressive press, the effort required to knock out the spent primer and resize the case makes it impossible to feel the bullet being inserted into a reprimed and loaded case. Does anyone know of a book or web site that covers this type of information?
 
Fifty .38 Special rounds. Remington brass, CCI 500 small pistol primers, 5 grains of Unique, 158 grain LSWC.

Going to the range on Monday. Will report back with results.
Good for you, welcome to reloading!! Those rounds will shoot fine. My first reloads were 20 rounds of .38 Special, Remington brass, CCI 500 primers, 148gr DEWC over 3.2gr W231. (still one of my favorite loads)
 
I NEVER go below the starting load when working from a modern manual. Too many stories of a squib in the barrel and the next shot = disaster. Just my .02.

That being said, those loads are on the hotter side, and are not really a good starting point. Depending on barrel length, those should come out around 800-900 fps.

Have fun, and shooting will never be the same.
 
Last edited:
YOU ARE HOOKED, YOU ARE HOOKED, YOU ARE HOOKED! (Just like the rest of us! )

Welcome to the forum and reloading.

The caution that ima mentions is a good one and I second the notion. Start out with good procedures and your reloading experience will be enjoyable.

Since the manuals didn't have your gun to pressure test loads in, they are only guessing what you will get when you put the components together. Educated guess, yes, but a guess just the same. That is WHY we start low and work up.

In this caliber, if you start at the minimum in a newer manual you will be fine.

Have fun though and be safe!
 
Thank you one and all. I will be using my 2 year old Model 10 for the testing. I've ran a lot of +P through it, even quite a bit of Buffalo Bore +P.

My goal is to work up an accurate (and warm) load for my 80's era Model 15.
 
welcome to the forum and to reloading. I understand where you want to go, but don't try to get there too fast. Work up your loads from minimum load data instead of starting near the top.
 
What intrigues me is why there is such variation between published loads and velocities using Unique.
 
The same reason why you start low... every gun is a law unto itself. Barrel and chamber dimensions vary as do brass and even powder lots. A moderate load in your gun with your components might well be dangerous in mine.
 
Fifty for fifty. One round was a bit snappy compared to the other 49. Nothing major, just noticeable. The Model 10 handled it just fine.

Thank you all for the encouragement.
 
Welcome Pigirondan and enjoy your new reloading addiction.
It just occurred to me that I loaded my first 357 magnum round exactly 12 months ago.
I am now getting a bit more adventurous and trying different powders and projectiles.
Can’t think of a better way to spend a couple of hours out in the shed of a night time and I get a kick out of knowing that the bullets that I take to the range are the ones that I made myself.
Campfire
 
My goal is to handload a round that feels the same as my so-called carry load, which is the standard pressure Buffalo Bore 158 grain SWC-HP.
 
OK, how did you do then?

My goal is to handload a round that feels the same as my so-called carry load, which is the standard pressure Buffalo Bore 158 grain SWC-HP.

I guess my title is my post too. How did you do in duplicating? What about velocity? Did they match?
 
It felt the same, IMO. I've yet to use a chronograph. In that same vein, it was no where near as snappy as the Buffalo Bore +P 158 grain SWCHP.
 
Back
Top