16 February 2021, 00:24
Bob NisbetBrass Jacket Bullets: Do They Need To Be Loaded Lighter Than Copper
I can purchase 9 MM brass bullets formed with lead core.
Do not know if the brass requires adjusting the powder charge.
Any Thoughts.
16 February 2021, 03:12
crbutlerI’d say yes and no.
If you have a load for a gilding metal bullet of the same weight, it won’t be a completely identical bullet. It may give different velocities and pressures. If your load is maxed, it could go over. More good loading practice than a brass vs gilding metal issue.
The brass/bronze jacket is just a Remington golden saber bullet in all likelihood.
16 February 2021, 04:13
miles58I do not give a flying fugg what kind of bullets they are or what either of the two halfwits above told you!
New bullets require a new workup if you want to keep coming home from the range with all your body parts you took there in working order.
Violate that ruleand sooner or later it will bite you. Do not do it.
16 February 2021, 04:41
Hipshootquote:
Originally posted by miles58:
I do not give a flying fugg what kind of bullets they are or what either of the two halfwits above told you!
New bullets require a new workup if you want to keep coming home from the range with all your body parts you took there in working order.
Violate that ruleand sooner or later it will bite you. Do not do it.
You are assuming that he is talking about maximum loads !
Hip
16 February 2021, 05:54
Lamarbrass is copper and zinc same as your case is made from.
the thing is the zinc content varies quite a bit between brands.
the question I am assuming is whether brass varies from copper when shot out a barrel.
having made the same bullets from both copper jackets and from true brass jackets, the only difference is when the jacket thickness is different.
other than that? seating depth is the only concern.
16 February 2021, 06:02
dpcdNot necessary to call me names. I didn't start doing all this yesterday. Unless you have actually done something, best not to comment on it. But in any case, do not call me names.
16 February 2021, 06:17
crbutlerquote:
Originally posted by miles58:
I do not give a flying fugg what kind of bullets they are or what either of the two halfwits above told you!
New bullets require a new workup if you want to keep coming home from the range with all your body parts you took there in working order.
Violate that ruleand sooner or later it will bite you. Do not do it.
Excuse me, but why am I a half wit?
I said:
I’d say yes and no.
If you have a load for a gilding metal bullet of the same weight, it won’t be a completely identical bullet. It may give different velocities and pressures. If your load is maxed, it could go over. More good loading practice than a brass vs gilding metal issue.
The brass/bronze jacket is just a Remington golden saber bullet in all likelihood.
In essence, I said he needs to do a work up, but that the brass/bronze is not the issue.
16 February 2021, 09:50
SaeedI have been loading ammo for so long, done so many things others would probably never even dream of, and found, for myself, that a lot of what has been written is not true at all.
From all practical points, changing primers, changing bullets, seating depths, mean absolutely nothing.
That has been the case in all the experiments I have done.