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A friend gave me the info for hodgdon Lil' gun shotgunpowder and the 158 grain bullet, I forgot the amount of powder. I can use any combinatione of powder and bullet if some one has the data. thanks.

2007-03-12 17:49:23 · 6 answers · asked by terry c 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

6 answers

First bit of advice.
You Don’t Use Load Data that some one just gives you HERE or Anywhere else.
They could thank it’s funny to give you an unsafe load just to see if you would use it.
All it take is one typo and you and you gun are in trouble.
Plus their are people out there who don’t know that there are 2 forms of 357 Revolver ammo Remington 357 Maximum or the 357 Magnum.
So for your safety no I will not, but I will advise you get a reloading manual for that information.
Please note I am not trying to be an @ss here I just wont to keep you safe from the nuts that will give you bad advise.
Now if were talking the Remington 357 Maximum or the 357 Magnum again could have been a typo here and you don’t wont some one giving you a Maximum load for a Magnum.
But both rounds are in the Speer reloading manual number 12, if I were you I would invest in it to save your self and you weapon from damage.
That my advice, and I do hope I did no offend you for it was not my intention.

D58

2007-03-12 18:20:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i'm a reloading instructor. you will desire to be very careful whilst using the Lyman handbook. Lyman is between the few agencies that produce the two reloading and bullet casting products. this implies you will get the lead archives mixed with the jacketed ammo archives. Lead is going down the barrel slicker than snot on warm teflon - copper jackets are like sand paper. you like 2 manuals. One from the human beings who make your kit - like your Lyman e book - and one from the corporation that makes your bullets/projectiles. you pick to apply the projectile producer's archives - and be sure this is interior the ball park with the Lyman e book. this way if there's a typo - you do not pay for it with a blown up gun. Now - my 2 cents. do not use any powder that demands below 3grs whilst making pistol rounds. Bullseye is a super examples - people who're epidermis flints like it because of the fact they simply use 2gr and would get 3500 rounds from on can (7,000 grains to a pound). the subject is you are able to accidetally get a double charge - even a tripple charge - and apparently like a single charge. you ought to use a much less dense powder that demands 4-6gr whilst making 38's - this way an unintended double charge will stick out like a sore thumb. quite whilst using a imaginative press. Fyi - I even have been reloading on condition that 1976 on a single degree press. maximum years I load 5K to 6K of ammo - some, whilst i'm in opposition i visit upward push as much as 15K of ammo in a season - yet I do all of it on a single degree press. and that i manage each and every around like it rather is the single that is going to win my next tournament or placed that huge bull moose on the table. In 34+ years I even have not blown up a single gun or had a single incident on the kind. None of my pals with imaginative presses can say that.

2016-12-18 12:16:31 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You need to go to a gun shop where they sell reloading supplies and either buy a reloading Manuel or ask for a free one from hodgdon. Not doing this can be disasters!!!!

2007-03-12 22:16:34 · answer #3 · answered by Jon 4 · 1 0

Are you NUTS! you can not use shotgun powder or mix powders. Use the guide lines within you reloading manual. Or else you or your fiend may be looking for a new face and hand(s).
Handgun powder for handguns only, shotgun power is shotguns only, they burn at different rates.

2007-03-13 03:55:02 · answer #4 · answered by gretsch16pc 6 · 2 1

For answers pertaining to reloading, I recommend going to surplusrifle.com or parallaxbills.com.

Both are good sites and have lots of reference material that is safe, accurate and current as well as links to other sites.

They have reloading forums on them as well.

I've referenced them many times for reloading other firearms.

2007-03-13 15:32:47 · answer #5 · answered by angelpoet04 4 · 0 0

stop sniffin the powder and you would remember

2007-03-12 17:53:35 · answer #6 · answered by nadi 1 · 0 2

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