Alpo Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 You're loading a cartridge. You have a jacketed bullet that weighs x amount. And it takes y amount of powder. You have a lead bullet that weighs the same x amount. It takes z amount of powder. I know the charges are not the same for lead bullets versus jacketed bullets. I just don't remember which one takes the lower charge. It seems like a lead bullet would take a lower charge. That lead drags more on the barrel. More friction, therefore more pressure for the same powder charge. So you use a lower charge for lead then you do for jacketed of the same weight. I think. Does anyone happen to know? Is it consistent? Let's say a 230 grain lead 45 at 850 ft per second uses a lower powder charge then a 230 grain fmj 45 also at 850 ft per second. Would that mean a 158 lead 38 Special at 900 would use a lower powder charge than a 158 jacketed soft point 38 Special at 900? I don't want to get into a discussion of "this lead bullet uses a lower powder charge because you shoot lead at a lower velocity than you do jacketed". I'm going for the same weight at the same velocity. Quote
Perro Del Diablo Posted December 12, 2024 Posted December 12, 2024 Lead takes lower because will cause lead fouling if to hot. The other way to get more with lead is copper cup on base of bullet. Quote
Pat Riot Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 Also lead slides easier through the bore. It takes less pressure to launch it. 1 Quote
Alpo Posted December 13, 2024 Author Posted December 13, 2024 (edited) 1 hour ago, Pat Riot said: Never mind. Brain fart. Edited December 13, 2024 by Alpo Quote
Pat Riot Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 1 minute ago, Alpo said: So for the same weight bullet, for the same velocity, a jacketed bullet would take a lower charge. A hypothetical example would be the jacketed bullet would use 10.2 grains of powder x while the lead bullet would use 11.4 for the exact same velocity with the exact same weight bullet? No. Vice Versa. In a .357 Magnum using W244 powder the max load for a 158 grain FMJ is 6.2gr at 1204 FPS. Pressure is 33,100 PSI For a 158 grain LRNFP the max load is 6.0gr at 1255 FPS. Pressure is 27,800 This is from the Hodgdon Reloading website. https://hodgdonreloading.com/rldc/?t=2 1 Quote
WOLFY Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 (edited) jacketed bullets need more pressure to be pushed out the bbl Edited December 13, 2024 by WOLFY Quote
Pat Riot Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 6 hours ago, Subdeacon Joe said: Cloth end goes in first. What is that silver band? Quote
Subdeacon Joe Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 2 hours ago, Pat Riot said: What is that silver band? Metal straps to hold the shot or shell onto the sabot. Shot had the straps just crossed. Common Shell and Spherical Case had a ring to expose the fuse. Canister just tied onto the sabot. Straps would have been zinc coated to prevent rust. 2 Quote
Pat Riot Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 1 hour ago, Subdeacon Joe said: Metal straps to hold the shot or shell onto the sabot. Are these for a cannon? I don’t think I have ever seen loads like this for a rifle. 1 Quote
Subdeacon Joe Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 3 minutes ago, Pat Riot said: Are these for a cannon? I don’t think I have ever seen loads like this for a rifle. Yep. The images are of munitions for smooth bore guns. The rifled guns had the powder bag affixed directly to the projectile without a wooden sabot. 2 Quote
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