Showing posts with label Heavy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heavy. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

Looking for a heavy barrel .22mag

Look at a Savage. They make a number of different models and all offer excellent accuracy. I own several and have found no fault with any of them. If you're primarily interested in shooting groundhogs/woodchucks, I suggest looking at the same gun in a 17 caliber (still a rimfire and ammo costs the same). I resisted getting this caliber but everyone I know who bought one has a gun that will outshoot mine by a small margin (on average, not every time). It's a flatter shooting caliber and is truly destructive on groundhogs/woodchucks. Go to savagearms.com and check them out. Prices range from very affordable to mid range compared to any custom gun. I'd suggest staying away from semi-automatic magnum rimfire rifles unless you're either a fairly good gunsmith, know a good gunsmith, or don't mind jamming and failure to feed. I've been down that road myself and it's not worth the trouble.

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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Old rem. 700 heavy barrel

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You most likely have Remington 700 Varmint Specials, made from 1967-94.

There should be 2 Remington Date Code Letters stamped into the LH rear side of their bbls, which will reveal the DOM.

Month Codes: [first letter]
B - L - A - C - K - P - O - W - D - E - R - X
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12

Year:______Code: [second letter]
1967_______ P
1968_______ R
1969_______ S
1970_______ T
1971_______ U
1972_______ W
1973_______ X
1974_______ Y
1975_______ Z
1976_______ I
1977_______ O
1978_______ Q
1979_______ V
1980_______ A
1981_______ B
1982_______ C
1983_______ D
1984_______ E
1985_______ F
1986_______ G
1987_______ H
1988_______ I
1989_______ J
1990_______ K
1991_______ L
1992_______ M
1993_______ N
1994_______ O

EXAMPLE: Date Code "L Y" = Feb 1974

Of their half-dozen chamberings, the .25-06 was the only one made with the M700 long-action, the rest being made on the M700 short action.

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Last edited by PetahW; Yesterday at 11:23 PM.

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Heavy .45 Colt ammo test

Here are my results, fired into shredded rubber mulch (compared to a 158 grain .357 mag fired into the same media with 17" penetration).

I like the 45 Colt. Great cartridge, made even better with the strong Ruger revolvers.


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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Heavy Keith style LSWC-HP GC for deer?

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DougGuy is offline Boolit Buddy Join DateApr 2013Posts59

Seems to be a good number of hollow cavity cast boolits making their place into hunting loads both pistol and rifle. Is there anyone casting a 300gr hollow point Keith style boolit or WFN hollow point in softer alloy with gas check .452" for .45 Colt? Seems to me that would make an excellent deer load at 1100 - 1200f/s.
I have a Keith style boolit I use for hunting, it's the 452424 Lyman. It's not a hollow point or GC design but I'm not convinced either feature is necessary for this cartridge at this velocity. I'm also developing a hunting load for the RD 454-290 gr boolit, it utilizes a GC but I guess that feature will allow me to utilize a softer alloy. When I go hunting I don't know if I'l be shooting a 90# white tail doe or a 300# bruiser boar. I don't have much experience with a HP CB hunting boolit, I'm pretty solidly in the big meplat camp. I only have one HP CB mould and my rifle doesn't much care for it. Some folks around here have awesome results with HP's, I just don't see the need.
Life Member NRA, TSRA
Smokeless powder is a passing fad! -Steve Garbe
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Some of my favorite recipes start out with a handful of used wheelweights.
Someone is probably casting a 300 grain HP but for deer, it is not really needed. I hunted deer with the 454424 for years before siwtching to 454190 over blackpowder. 260 grains of lead at +/- 950 fps is more than enough for penetration and accuracy.
Knowledge I take to my grave is wasted.

A law, without punishment, is merely advice.

I prefer to use cartridges born before I was.

Have a 44 caliber mold. Mihec copy of H&G 503. Three different sizes of HP pins to control how much you get.
Think it's 255 grains? For big game like deer I have a RCBS 245gr gas checked boolit I cast soft enough to expand a little.
Never shot a deer with one but I Know they'd work. So would the HP boolits. For a 45 colt I've the NOE copy of a Lyman SWC. Has a huge meplat without any further expansion.
I thought I had a pic of my boolits, but guess not.
In my 45 colt, I am shooting a Lyman 265 grain plain base Keith style HP. Cast of 50/50 air cooled and hollow pointed with a flat end pin, loaded to Ruger only levels out of my 7 1/2 inch blackhawk, it is devistating on hogs. Even the big uns. I haven't shot a deer with it yet, but dont think I will unless it is a real bruiser and that is all I have. I dont even shoot eater hogs with that load. Only those that I intend to dump get shot with that load. The last eater I shot, I made a poor shot, right through the shoulders on a 125 or so pounder and basically, I had to cut the hind quarters off and dump the rest. It was alll full of blood and shrapnel. Just a waste.
I came into this world kicking, screaming, and covered in someone elses blood. I plan to go out the same way.
I'll try to point something out here........ which may do some good. Several people here insist on using 50% WW / 50% pure lead alloy air cooled. That is quite soft AND if you hollow point it the boolit WILL blow up if pushed past a relatively low velocity. To get proper performance you need to water drop those boolits using that alloy. It gives a whole different aspect to it. You get premium performance boolits with it that way...... even when hollow pointed...... especially in the 357 Mag, the various 40 Auto pistols, 41 Mag, 44 Special, 44 Mag and 45 Colt.
45 2.1

Knowledge without understanding is a dangerous thing. For a little knowledge entices us to walk its path, a bit more provides the foundation on which we take our stand, and a sufficient amount can erect a wall of knowledge around us, trapping us in our own ignorance.

Never sleep, never die

Knowledge is easy to get, but worthless if you never use it. However the info is free, so the only person you have to blame is yourself if you chose not to use the information.

I'll try to point something out here........ which may do some good. Several people here insist on using 50% WW / 50% pure lead alloy air cooled. That is quite soft AND if you hollow point it the boolit WILL blow up if pushed past a relatively low velocity. To get proper performance you need to water drop those boolits using that alloy. It gives a whole different aspect to it. You get premium performance boolits with it that way...... even when hollow pointed...... especially in the 357 Mag, the various 40 Auto pistols, 41 Mag, 44 Special, 44 Mag and 45 Colt.lemme ask a serious but probably, to many, stupid question here. if ur gonna WD it to make it harder, why not just cast a harder (ie: add more WW) to the mix? I ask because I am wanting to hunt white tails this year w/my 629 loaded with the HP devastator boolit cast soft (50/50 mix). last year I shot 3 w/my mod. 94 loaded w/173 gr gc straight WW AC. they fragmented like grenades inside the deer. I like a small entry and large exit hole in the animal. thanks
harley45 is offline Boolit Master Join DateMar 2005LocationIndianaPosts360
Could we also heat treat and get the same result as WD?
lemme ask a serious but probably, to many, stupid question here. if ur gonna WD it to make it harder, why not just cast a harder (ie: add more WW) to the mix? I ask because I am wanting to hunt white tails this year w/my 629 loaded with the HP devastator boolit cast soft (50/50 mix). last year I shot 3 w/my mod. 94 loaded w/173 gr gc straight WW AC. they fragmented like grenades inside the deer. I like a small entry and large exit hole in the animal. thanksI want the outside harder, not the core...... which I get the way I do it. With more hardening agents in the alloy, the core would be harder also. In handguns with cast hollow points, this has been well tested on deer and other varmints over the last twenty or so years. Chest cavity shots show some expansion in the ribs going in with the vitals disrupted a lot and a quarter size exit out thru the opposite ribcage wall with very dead on the spot deer or very shortly thereafter. Shooting into virgin clay walls in stream beds show where expansion initiates and the length/ shape along its travel. Tested against the best factory hollow points show equal disruption with slightly more penetration for cast. Could we also heat treat and get the same result as WD?I've got some friends that say yes, but they haven't shown me any deer autopsy's to prove that either. Casting at a lower (700 to 725 degree) temperature and water dropping give 30 caliber and above some soft core / harder outside attributes (at least for me... but your mileage may vary). You would have to try it both ways to decide, but I'm not going there.
45 2.1

Knowledge without understanding is a dangerous thing. For a little knowledge entices us to walk its path, a bit more provides the foundation on which we take our stand, and a sufficient amount can erect a wall of knowledge around us, trapping us in our own ignorance.

Never sleep, never die

Knowledge is easy to get, but worthless if you never use it. However the info is free, so the only person you have to blame is yourself if you chose not to use the information.

dgb553 is offline Boolit Mold Join DateFeb 2010LocationNW OhioPosts6
This months Handloader magazine has an article by Brian Pearce and it's called Sixguns and Bears. His son uses an RCBS mould 45-270 SAA cast with Lyman #2 alloy loaded with 11.1 grains of Longshot that produces an average 1,048 fps. The gun his son uses is a Ruger New model Blackhawk 45 Colt from Lipsey, which is strong enough to handle that load. Not all 45s are that strong. In past articles he has used 452424 Lyman Keith style bullet at about 900 fps on deer with great success. My friends who hunt white tail use plain base cast SWC or RNFN, no one uses an HP.
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Abbreviations used in Reloading
Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt"


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Thursday, March 14, 2013

Heavy bullet molds

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bowtech127 is offline Boolit Mold Join DateFeb 2011LocationSoo, MIPosts4

Hi guys, long story short I may have the chance to transfer to Alaska next year with work and I want to spend the summer getting ready. I'm looking for a "heavy" mold for my 45/70 guide gun in the 500 gr range. Any suggestions? I want something that has a big meplat for stopping big bears. Also the same for my 44 mag. I like the Oregon Trail 310 gr GC bullet but I dont know who makes the molds. Thanks in advance!

Chris

Go to Accurate molds and see what Toms got to offer. If you don't find what you are looking for shoot him an email and he can design the boolit you're thinking of.
for the oregon trails mold i'd look at magma engineering.
it's all an educated guess,,,, till the trigger is pulled.

the more i find out about shootin boolits, the more it contradicts everything i ever learned about shooting jaxketed.

You might take a look at a Lyman 429 650 and see if that would fit your needs, Dale
" A politician is the lowest form of life on earth. A liberal Democrat is the lowest form of politician" George S Patton
bowtech127 is offline Boolit Mold Join DateFeb 2011LocationSoo, MIPosts4
Thanks for the replies everyone. Thats exacly what I was looking for! Take care everybody!
You may not post new threadsYou may not post repliesYou may not post attachmentsYou may not edit your postsForum Rules

Abbreviations used in Reloading
Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt"


View the original article here