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My buddy and myself are going to be testing some differnt powders for a good woods carry .357 load in a 4' S&W, and a pair of SP-101's in 3 1/16" and 2 1/4". The powders will be H110, H4227, W296, N110, and N105. The first three call for small magnum pistol, while the VV powders call for small rifle. I thought the only difference between small rifle and small pistol primers was the cup thickness. Would small rifle be a close if not even substitue for small pisol magnum primers? The main reason I ask is I have a ton of small rifle and no small pistol magnum primers. Thanks for any clarification with this! | ||
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one of us |
I've always used small pistol mag primers even with VV powders in my 357 MAG (NOT 357 MAX!!!). I would EXPECT the small pistol mag primer to be similar but maybe slightly cooler/less powerful than the rifle primer. Again, no problem there. The small rifle primer's thicker cup is reported to occasionally give poor ignition with the lighter strike of a pistol hammer. I accidentally loaded a batch (50) of 38 spl loads in my S&W using small rifle primers and they all fired without a problem. I'd say if you are determined to use what you have, work up SLOW, and shoot a lot to test reliability. If you have a chronograph, use it and look for signs of poor ignition...high spreads and erratic velocity. Primers are cheap though...what's wrong with spending $25 and getting a case of pistol primers anyway? Believe nothing, no matter where you read it, or who said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your own common sense. | |||
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One of Us |
pistol primers are a bit thinner but softer material. the ignition from a pistol primer is softer than a rifle primer. using a rifle primer in a revolver may give you some misfires as the striking for the revolver is much less than the striker in a rifle. so far as magnum primer go, personaly I've never found a use for them in pistol loads. | |||
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One of Us |
I'd check your load data and ensure that your W powder specs are for .357 mag PISTOL, and not .357 MAX RIFLE. Also, some books will provide load specs in .357 MAG (not max) for a rifle. Typically the rifle loads are faster because of a longer barrel. And sometimes they're loaded hotter. Or -- possibly, they're loaded with a rifle primer because they're being fired in a rifle. Primers are significant in working up a load. I wouldn't use data that specifies "rifle primers" for a pistol load, particularly when you're loading to "collect data" for a pistol, accuracy, performance, etc. I'm familiar with H110, excellent choice for magnum loads in .357 or .44 mag. ANY moderate to slow burning powder might benefit from a magnum primer, but you need to work up your data. As noted above, a case of primers is about $25. That's insignificant when you compare it to cost of bullets, powder, brass, and your firearms. -- Besides, if you loaded w/ rifle primers and got data, would you really want to continue loading with rifle primers for ammo carried in a pistol? Sounds like a lot of work figuring out data that's not very useful. I had a full case of small rifle primers. No "small rifle." And so I swapped them at the local shop. Gun shows swap stuff too. | |||
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one of us |
I to haven`t used rifle primers in pistol loads. Although they may work fine I can`t really say. The thought that you may have mistakenly looked at 357 MAX data in place of 357 MAG data is possible. I do know the 357 MAX runs at rifle pressures and rifle primers are recommend because of this when loading this cartridge. The 357 magnum when loaded for a rifle also has rifle primers recommended, but for handgun use I`d stay with pistol loads and primers. ------------------------------------ The trouble with the Internet is that it's replacing masturbation as a leisure activity. ~Patrick Murray "Why shouldn`t truth be stranger then fiction? Fiction after all has to make sense." (Samual Clemens) "Saepe errans, numquam dubitans --Frequently in error, never in doubt". | |||
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