Greenjoytj
Member
Is a hot handload defined as one loaded to a reputable reloading book maximum charge weight, or one that has been worked up to be beyond the book maximum charge yet still performs safely in your gun? I would guess that start is start, max is max and anything beyond max book is called hot.
If your chronograph shows your max book load handload has velocity lower than the book, do you continue to add powder till your chromo says you've hit the velocity of the max load?
Your gun maybe a slow gun and never reach book max MV at max charge weight.
Also the reverse scenario if you should hit the max load velocity at say half way up the recipes list of load increments is that mid point now your max load for that particular gun? I suspect this maybe true. Your gun maybe a fast gun and reach max MV with less powder.
I've read that reading traditional signs of high pressure is quite unreliable.
1) reading flatten primers may not be a reliable tell tail of high pressure under certain conditions. What those condition are I don't know.
2) cartridge case head expansion (CHE) requires too much art and skill to master. I recall reading the story about the development of the 7mm STW and how expertly concocted handloads using this CHE method proved in the ballistics lab to be over SAMMI limits. Would CHE work in a 35K psi 357 mag ctg I don't know?
3) Ease of fired case extraction the cases just fall out of the cylinder when its upended. Is that a reliable sign of pressure within the max rating? What if the chambers were bored off spec and were too large. Maybe split cases would detect that over size chamber condition, I don't know.
Every-time I reload little questions like these pop into my head.
I've got a dozen plus loading manuals I would have thought I would have stumbled across the answers to question like these by now.
If your chronograph shows your max book load handload has velocity lower than the book, do you continue to add powder till your chromo says you've hit the velocity of the max load?
Your gun maybe a slow gun and never reach book max MV at max charge weight.
Also the reverse scenario if you should hit the max load velocity at say half way up the recipes list of load increments is that mid point now your max load for that particular gun? I suspect this maybe true. Your gun maybe a fast gun and reach max MV with less powder.
I've read that reading traditional signs of high pressure is quite unreliable.
1) reading flatten primers may not be a reliable tell tail of high pressure under certain conditions. What those condition are I don't know.
2) cartridge case head expansion (CHE) requires too much art and skill to master. I recall reading the story about the development of the 7mm STW and how expertly concocted handloads using this CHE method proved in the ballistics lab to be over SAMMI limits. Would CHE work in a 35K psi 357 mag ctg I don't know?
3) Ease of fired case extraction the cases just fall out of the cylinder when its upended. Is that a reliable sign of pressure within the max rating? What if the chambers were bored off spec and were too large. Maybe split cases would detect that over size chamber condition, I don't know.
Every-time I reload little questions like these pop into my head.
I've got a dozen plus loading manuals I would have thought I would have stumbled across the answers to question like these by now.