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Slamhound, Very good reply. I have learnt something and I'm happy for that. To close the chapter .45 Colt loads, I have found smth very interresting on that. From Big Bores Sixguns book by John Taffin. There is 3 levels of .45 Colt loads. Level one :Colt New frontier and S&W Model 25 Level two : we have the .44 magnum frame size .45 Colts, the Ruger Blackwak and Bisley, the Texas Longhorn Arms Improved Number Five and Flat-Top Target, the Colt Anaconda and the Dan Wesson. For these sixguns, a 300 ge bullet at 1200 feet per second muzzle velocity puts us into the largergema category. For this load level I prefer 21.5 gr of either H110 or WW296. Loading manuals go to 23 gr with jacketed bullets, so I feel perfectly safe with cast bullets and 1-1/2 gr less powder. Level three : find us with the five-shot custom sixgub built on Ruger Blackhawks and Biseleys by sixgunsmiths such as Hamilton Bowen, David Clements, john Linebaugh and jim Stroh. All of these men are masters at building customs sixguns. With these sixguns built in th fivegun persuasion, .45 Colt loads with either 260 or 300 gr bullets at 1500 feet per second are easily and safely attained. Hope this can help you. ------------------ | |||
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Slamhound the real problem is that morter like trajectory at long distance not lack of penetration. I've busted rocks at hundreds of yards with 44Mag and 45 Colt handguns but animals aren't rocks. I like game animals under 25yds if I can arrange it. I use open sights mostly, but have a 2x on my 454Casull. Even with it I prefer the animal under 100 yards. In any case, I agree with you. At any range you shoot the problem won't be lack of penetration with hard cast lead bullets. | |||
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