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| Its all about price for me if I can buy factory ammo for what I can buy brass and load for I buy factory and shoot that up to get the brass. If I can buy brass and componants for less then factory I go that way. |
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| I always buy componets and load my own. that way I can start out with light loads and get comfortable with the gun. especially in something like a .460 |
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One of Us
| Encores and Contenders do not recoil the same as revolvers.Buy the dies and brass and start with lower power loads and work up.Full house loads with out a muzzle brake are going to be more than you thought. |
| Posts: 4372 | Location: NE Wisconsin | Registered: 31 March 2007 | 
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| quote: Originally posted by OLBIKER: Encores and Contenders do not recoil the same as revolvers.Buy the dies and brass and start with lower power loads and work up.Full house loads with out a muzzle brake are going to be more than you thought.
That's what I was thinking. My Mike Bellm ported .45-70 Encore barrel of 18.5" OAL (wanted to be able to use it as a rifle if I ever get around to a buttstock for one of my Encore frames) is about par in recoil with my basically stock .45-70 BFR, although the recoil increases a bit in the BFR as you unload the wheel, not a lot, but it's noticeable when you lose the ballast of 1620 grains of lead + the minor weight of brass and powder. Not as stout of recoil as the BFR with the .450 Marlin wheel installed, though :-) If you're gonna kill a hog, you may as well make it emphatically dead, right? Out of morbid curiosity, although I should web search it, any idea why they named it .460 when it's nominally 452 thou? Thanks, PM |
| Posts: 176 | Location: Earth | Registered: 18 December 2008 | 
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