I bought a pound of it Yesterday. I've never used it before though. Thought I might try it in .45 ACP, 9mm, and maybe .38 Special.
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I bought a pound of it Yesterday. I've never used it before though. Thought I might try it in .45 ACP, 9mm, and maybe .38 Special.
I use it in .32s&w long, at 2grs each,talk about getting some milage from a pound!Same accuracy as Bullseye,for me with very limited paper testing, almost all mine are fired at pistol cartridge lever action rifle silhouette targets and 3/4 of them hit their mark.
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I have used it in a 9mm. Takes a very small amount but the handgun didn’t need cleaning afterwards.
Not sure if you cast and lube or cast and powder coat but if you power coat make sure you store rounds nose up. Over time "Titegroup" does some kind of chemical reaction to the powder coat on base.
I use it for everything. Well almost everything. 38spl 9mm 45gap 45acp 30-30 and more. I love it. Be careful as you can double or triple load with it.
Don't worry about that at all!
I tested it at GREAT lengths (months of setting) back when I used TG for every load I did for pistoles. The TEENY few bit of flakes of TG powder that will stick to the base of PC'd boolits changes NOTHING in shooting performance. IT ALL BURNS! According to recovered slugs I inspected.
Go ahead and use TG for just about every load you can find data for in the books and the maker's website.
If it causes you to lose sleep worrying about it, like said, store your load nose up.
banger
I use it in 9mm. Basically because I have it, I need to use it in something, and it works. I've also used it in .38s and .357s. Titegroup will work in just about anything.
It's one of my favorites in 45acp. 5.5 grains over a 185gr lead swc is pretty nice. Turns my 1911's into big 22's :D
My go to powder for 380, 38, 9, 40 & 45 acp. Meters very well, burns clean, cheaper than most other comparable powders.
I use it in all my light pistol loads and cat sneeze 30-30, 30-06 loads. Works great for that. I did find that it doesn't seem to like to be driven hard. When I approach the top end of the data listed for my pistols, the groups began to open up.
I found that it's better for jacketed, burns hot.
4.5 grains of TG is outstanding in my .45 Rock Island.
I use it for full mag loads in 44 for my Desert Eagle (9 grns. w/240 grn. jacketed bullet). Seems to develop higher chamber pressures that the DE likes.
With the same load I clocked a 5 round string at over 1900 FPS out of a 9.5" Super Redhawk.
I've used it for over 20yrs. In 9MM, .38Spl, 40S&W, .38-40, ,44-40, .44Spl, .44Mag, .45AR and .45ACP with absolutely no problems.
Other then to NEVER leave it in a powder measure more then a few hours at a time.
It will "eat" a PM's plastic hopper in a very short amount of time.
I don't use it in .45Colt. Simply because I discovered a load of 5.0grs of Clay's under a 225-230grs TC about 30yrs ago that will group 5 shots under 2" at 25yrds.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
I use tightgroup in 38, 9mm, and 45acp. It just works, no need to reinvent the wheel..
In 9mm, it produces better velocity than most of the powers listed, even the "new" ones.
Tightgroup could cover most pistol loads short of magnums.