When I bought a Ruger Blackhawk 357 magnum in 1967, 38 special cases could be picked up by the bucket full at the local range. Not many 357 mag. cases were left lying around. We would use the Lyman #358156 bullet, seated in the lower crimp groove, which is why there were two crimp grooves . It was designed for loading 357 loads in 38 spcl. cases , it sounds like a dangerous thing to do but back then I didn't see ( or experience) any problems. Worked OK back then. Never did try to see if a round so loaded would fit in a 38 special chamber...Must keep them out of 38 specials.Is there anything wrong with loading 38sp to 357 levels if I am using a 357 to shoot it in. It looks like there is enough room in the casing.
I would ask 'what's the point?'.
I MUCH prefer to download .357 Mag to .38 Spl in my .357s then to even consider putting a .38 case in one.
Is there anything wrong with loading 38sp to 357 levels if I am using a 357 to shoot it in. It looks like there is enough room in the casing.
That is certainly a good choiceHow about looking at 38+P loads before going straight to 357 MAG loading? That should give you a good idea of the pressure differences between the two cartridges.
Chris
I would ask 'what's the point?'.
I already have plenty of 38 cases and mostly 357 revolvers so I was just wondering if there was any harm loading those same cases to higher energy loads.
If you want "hotter .38s" for your .357, just stay within +P loads.I already have plenty of 38 cases and mostly 357 revolvers so I was just wondering if there was any harm loading those same cases to higher energy loads.