24 October 2006, 14:49
asdf.357/44 B&D brass
Anyone form brass for this oldster? Is it necessary to anneal the brass near the mouth, or can you just lube factory .44 brass and run it through the B&D sizer die? Thanks.
24 October 2006, 19:56
Steve E.I have been forming brass for this one for about 25 years. If you start with virgin brass you might lose 1 out of 50, if you use once fired brass you will probably lose 10 or more. I've never had a forming die for the B&D, I just use my reloading die. It's one of the easiest wildcats to form. Have fun, I know I have and still will. I have an 1894 Marlin in 357 B&D also.
Steve E..........
24 October 2006, 20:29
Idaho SharpshooterI would be tempted to set a FL 41 Mag sizing die to the same length as the caseneck and go that intermediate step. But Steve has one, and run 'em in and load 'em seems to work.
Rich
25 October 2006, 05:01
TSJI picked up a brand new 357/44 reamer for $20.00 at a gunshow some time ago. I figured if I ever found a set of dies cheap I'd make one. If someone wants to use the reamer in the mean time, give a holler.
25 October 2006, 14:57
Don EdwardsLike Steve said...
Lube it, run it through the sizer die, clean off the lube and proceed...
Cheers,
Don
29 October 2006, 00:32
sharps54quote:
Originally posted by Don Edwards:
Like Steve said...
Lube it, run it through the sizer die, clean off the lube and proceed...
Cheers,
Don
Yep, works for me.
29 October 2006, 01:34
asdfThanks everyone. I imagine that's why the shoulder angle was made so shallow.
29 October 2006, 05:35
Woodrow SThe shoulder angle is shallow so upon firing the expanding brass won't back out of the cylinder, binding it up.
Woody