th 9 Edition The Definitive Guide for Novice to Expert The ABCs of RELOADING Edited by C. Rodney James Thank you for purchasing this Gun Digest eBook. Sign up for our newsletter and receive special offers, access to free content, and information on the latest new releases and must-have firearms resources! Plus, receive a coupon code to use on your first purchase from GunDigestStore.com for signing up. or visit us online to sign up at http://gundigest.com/ebook-promo Contents Special Offers Introduction Chapter 1. Safety First, Last & Always Chapter 2. The Cartridge Case Chapter 3. Understanding Pressure and Headspace Chapter 4. Primers Chapter 5. Blackpowder and Its Variants Chapter 6. Smokeless Powder Chapter 7. Bullets Chapter 8. Casting Bullets Chapter 9. Bullet Sizing and Lubricating Chapter 10. Tooling Up for Reloading Chapter 11. Rifle Cartridge Reloading Chapter 12. Handgun Cartridge Reloading Chapter 13. Shotgun Ammunition Reloading Chapter 14. Ballistics Chapter 15. Sources and Resources Introduction to Gun Digest Reloading Archives Chapter 16. Reloading Ammunition by Lt. Col. E. Naramorer Chapter 17. Ammunition Guide by Maurice H. Decker Chapter 18. Casting Lead Alloy Bullets by Col. Townsend Whelen Chapter 19. Special Bullet Sizing Dies by E. J. Krava Chapter 20. Practical Pressures by John Maynard Chapter 21. Early Loading Tools by Richard H. Chamberlain Chapter 22. Better Handloads by Kent Bellah Chapter 23. New Brass for Old by George C. Nonte Chapter 24. Case Neck Variations by Norman E. Johnson Chapter 25. Handloading Philosophy by Don Martin Chapter 26. Shot Loads for Revolvers by Edward Dams Chapter 27. Pressures and the Revolver by William M. Caldwell Chapter 28. Square Shot and Little Flying Saucers by Roger Barlow Chapter 29. Smokeless Loads for Double Rifles by Ray Marriage and Dick Vogt Chapter 30. The Lyman Story by Mason Williams Chapter 31. Double Bullets! by V. R. Gaertner Chapter 32. Compact Loading Bench by William F. Greif Chapter 33. Shooting Lead Bullets by Ron Wozny About the Author About the Cover Acknowledgments Copyright FREE Firewarms e-book High Caliber Sweepstakes Introduction THERE ARE AT least five good reasons for reloading. First is economy. Someone who has come to enjoy the sport of shooting soon discovers that the cost of factory ammunition has become almost prohibitive. A pleasant afternoon of target shooting, banging through a half dozen boxes of cartridges or more, can run past the hundred dollar mark if you use anything other than 22 rimfires. By reloading brass centerfire cartridge cases with commercially available bullets, primers and smokeless powder you can reduce this cost by better than 60% over commercial ammunition. Even if empty cases are purchased new, the savings over commercially-made ammunition is still better than 25%, because you supplied the labor to make the finished ammunition. If you cast your own lead- alloy bullets, you can save even more since good bullets can be made from scrap alloys that can be bought for very little or even obtained for free. Second is accuracy. Firearms and ammunition are standardized — more or less — with a range of tolerances which means that your average gun will function properly with your average commercial ammunition, producing acceptably accurate results. For those who want better than “acceptable,” handloading your ammunition allows you to make custom-crafted ammunition, loaded to draw the maximum degree of accuracy from your gun because the powders and bullets are selected by you and tested by you to produce the best accuracy in your particular gun. A third reason might be termed “usefulness.” While commercial ammunition may be available in perhaps two or three loadings, handloaded ammunition can extend this to more than a dozen. Low-power cast-bullet loads can be made for short-range practice, allowing economical shooting with low noise and low recoil. This means not only less wear and tear on your gun, but on yourself as well. Heavy hunting loads can be fabricated for taking the largest game possible within the limits of a particular rifle or handgun. Light, flat-shooting bullets, designed to expand rapidly on small game, can be loaded to turn a “deer rifle” into a varmint rifle offering extended use for spring and summer varmint shooting. Reduced-velocity loads can turn a varmint rifle into a good small game rifle that will kill effectively without destroying edible meat. Thus the usefulness of a gun is doubled by the simple expedient of altering the ammunition. Necessity, that mother of invention, is a fourth reason to reload. There are any number of older guns, both foreign and domestic, for which commercial ammunition is simply not available. Cartridge cases may be formed by reshaping and trimming from similar cartridge cases that have the same size head and a similar size body. In some instances the cartridge cases you need may be commercially available, but the commercial loadings are not suitable for your gun which, because of its age, may require a lighter load or one of black instead of smokeless powder. A final reason is added enjoyment. Mastering a craft that will improve your shooting is an extension of the shooting sport. You will gain a better understanding of the dynamics involved in the shooting process. Good shooting is far more than simply good “aiming.” Good aim and proper shooting technique are necessary for hitting what you shoot at, but you will score far more hits if you have a clear understanding of the ammunition in your gun and what it is and is not capable of doing and why. Who should reload? This is a question firearms writers hear fairly often. It's not for everyone. The casual shooter, satisfied with rimfire ammunition performance, the person who targets his gun once or twice a year, the person with no time for hobbies, will find little use for this avocation. Then there are those who may wish to join the reloading clan, but for reasons of safety would be best advised not to. This category includes those persons who persist in drinking or smoking while reloading, the chronically careless, the forgetful and accident prone, and those given to dangerous experimentation. Reloading is far safer than driving a car, but you have to pay attention to what you are doing. Reloading is as safe or as dangerous; as economical or expensive; as simple or complicated as YOU make it. How do you get started? As an educator facing eager students champing at the bit to get going with the “hands on” part, I began my classes with an apologetic: “Yes, I applaud your enthusiasm, but I really think you should know a little something about what you are you are going to be doing.” Those who don't have a bad habit of breaking equipment, getting poor results and having no clue as to why the above happened. You can't learn from your mistakes unless you can figure out what they were and why they happened. To put it another way — some people live and learn, others just live, but never as long or as happily. What kinds of guns are we loading for? This book is designed basically for shooters of modern guns designed for metallic cartridges using smokeless powder. With the increase in interest the shooting of vintage guns, with light smokeless loads, blackpowder and blackpowder substitutes, a chapter has been added on this subject. The bibliographic material in Chapter 12 will direct the reloader to what is considered advanced reloading. These resources will touch on loading for black powder guns, early smokeless guns which may not be up to modern loads or may have chamber and bore dimensions different from those of current manufacture. This book is not a manual containing loading data, but an overview of the reloading process — to cover those things critical to the craft, but not found in loading manuals. Chapter 1 Safety First, Last & Always Before beginning any activity, a solid foundation is needed to build upon, and reloading is no different. WHAT IS A MODERN GUN? WHEN I WAS GROWING up in the 50's and 60's, cartridge boxes carried the warning that “these loadings are for modern arms in good condition.” Contemporary loading manuals did too. But what is a modern gun? Like any other arbitrary definition, it has fuzzy edges. Modern gun designs (such as modern-looking double-action revolvers) came into being in the late 1880's. Modern semiautomatic pistols were on the market by 1900. Bolt-action, 30- caliber rifles intended for high pressure (40,000 to 60,000 psi) smokeless powder ammunition were in general military use by 1895. Roughly speaking, the era of modern gun making begins around 1886–1900. The real issue is whether the gun for which you wish to reload can take the pressures of modern ammunition. For instance, a solidly-built, tightly-locking Winchester low-wall, single shot or Stevens target rifle from the last century can be safely used with modern, high-velocity 22 Long Rifle ammunition. To use such ammunition in a light revolver or pistol from the same era will soon destroy it. Even guns made as recently as the 1920's may not be safe with the high pressures generated by the high velocity loadings. The 22 LR Reising automatic
Description: