I read somewhere that the typical taper crimp applied to .45 ACP for use in semiautos may not be adequate for revolver use.
As already stated, standard power 45ACP loads in a full size all steel revolver are not going to have a problem jumping crimp unless they were grossly mis-assembled.
However hot loads (45 Super) in a lightweight alloy frame (Sc/Al) revolver can jump crimp if not held in place with good bullet-case tension.
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The article recommended a roll crimp just above the ogive. I'm not able to check at the moment, are .45 ACP dies capable of a roll crimp?
To be able to crimp over the ogive you'd have to deep seat the bullet. In a 45ACP case that might get you in trouble. The powder volume (density & weight) might preclude that being it's a relatively small case.
I deep seat round nose bullets in 45 Colt & 460 Magnum cases but they're reduced loads with fast/moderate speed powders in large capacity cases with little fear of running into pressure issues.
And when you can safely deep seat the bullet over the ogive you only need a few thousands of an inch crimp on the case mouth to hold the bullet from moving forward. Just enough to touch the curve of the bullet. I've found a taper crimp die will often suffice in this manner.
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Can I use .45 Colt dies or are the dimensions wrong?
If you have the Lee 4 die
Factory
Crimp
Die sets in both 45ACP and 45 Colt then when you load 45AR cases & bullets with cannelures you can remove the crimping insert from the Colt FCD & substitute it in the ACP FCD, along with a spacer (I use a 3/8" ID copper bushing, ~0.5" long by ~0.5" wide, as the Colt insert is shorter than the ACP's) to roll crimp them.
Conversely, if you load some 45 Colt cases with bullets w/o cannelures (light to moderate loads) you do the substitution swap the other way.
If you have the ACP FCD set but don't have the Colt FCD set, I read you can buy the 45 Colt's FCD crimp insert, along with the spacer, from LEE for a nominal fee, by calling & asking. That way you keep the FCD features, post-sizing & easy adjustments.
The post-sizer on the two FCDs are not the same diameter (Colt & ACP), with the Colt being larger by several thousands (.478" vs .471" ID; Colt vs ACP). This is one reason I don't interchange them as a complete unit, but swap the crimping insert only, besides the overall die length differences.
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