i have a 45 CAL.1917 COLT revolver in 45 AUTO RIM, and can be used with MOON CLIPS for 45 ACP, question is can I use load data for 45 ACP in it? because i want to shoot AUTO RIM in it. thank's.
i have a 45 CAL.1917 COLT revolver in 45 AUTO RIM, and can be used with MOON CLIPS for 45 ACP, question is can I use load data for 45 ACP in it? because i want to shoot AUTO RIM in it. thank's.
As I understand the history of the Auto-Rim, yes. The only difference is the rim and was done to eliminate the need for the full or half moon clips.
Having said that, I encourage you to wait for confirmation from those more knowledgeable than me.
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As long as the bullet and powder charge are the same, yes the Auto Rimmed and the std. ACP case can be loaded the same.
To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, the trouble with many shooting experts is not that they're ignorant; its just that they know so much that isn't so.
I have two 25-2 S&Ws and a Colt NS in 45acp. I dearly hate moons and load 45AR for the three of them. Use 45acp dies and data. Shell holder is the only difference. Load nothing but cast. I’m not into anything I need to speed load so I say shoot the moon to moon clips.
Some of the older manuals list loads for both Rounds together, but modern manuals--at least Lyman and Speer--list them separately, in order to give more accurate ballistic info. (A 5.5" revolver and a 5 inch semi-auto will not produce identical velocities.)
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If you want to shoot swc loads in ar brass you might want to check out an RCBS roll crimp die.
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Thumbcocker, roger that. thanks for the input. will do. thanks again. toot.
I use the same die and setting to load for 1911 and revolver(22-4 S&W). The only change I make is in the shell holders and crimping dies. I seat on one die(with the same bullet seating depth on both ACP & AR) and crimp with different dies. I use a Redding taper crimp die for 1911 and a Redding Profile crimp die for AR. Works for me. james
The only thing I’ll add is that Elmer Kieth recommended hard cast bullets for the shallow rifling in the 1917 revolvers. So I used water quenched wheel weights in the one Colt and two S&Ws that I had. I once had reply letters from him and P.O. Ackley ( on different subjects) when they both worked for G&A.
As stated above, 45 ACP data can be used in 45 AR. Some reloading manuals list separate 45 AR data, but the difference is negligible. The ACP data is usually just a tad hotter to ensure function in semi-autos. Your 1917 can handle it.
Check your throats which could be surprisingly large. My S&W 25 has .455 throats, so I used boolits sized to .454. Accuracy is important to me since I shoot bullseye competition with it.
TNsailorman,Texas by GOD and oldsalt444, thanks for the input. it makes sense,. will save in my favorites.
In heat treated post-1917 date of manufacture Colt New Service revolvers having purpose-built .45 ACP cylinders there are no issues using standard .45 ACP data in Auto Rim cases.
However, be aware that some early M1917s were assembled using leftover frames and cylinders from the 1914 British .455 order. In these guns they simply faced off the rear of the cylinder to provide clip clearance and used a .45 ACP sideplate, to correctly position the shortened cylinder. (The cylinder lug, called the "frame lug" on an S&W, is machined integral with the sideplate on a Colt). These early guns can be readily identified by not having a stop-surface in the chambers. Loose .45 ACP ammunition inserted without the clip falls in flush with the rear face of the cylinder, rather than "standing proud" with suffient protrusion to be struck by the firing pin.
Contrary to popular folklore published by Keith and repeated many times since by others, the chambers on these early guns are NOT bored "straight through." I have one, the cylinder of which is pictured. It has a normal angled transition from a .480" diameter at the case mouth to the .456" diameter cylinder throats, and differs from the cylinder on my 1914 British contract .455 Eley New Service only in the length of the cylinder where the rear face was shaved to provide clip clearance, and different location of the lug on the sideplate. These revolvers work fine with Auto Rim brass or clipped .45 ACP ammunition, but for safety you want to hold pressures below 14,000 psi in the non-heat-treated cylinders. There a few recorded instances of early M1917s blowing up during proof with .45 ACP proof loads, but guns which passed proof were deemed safe with ordinary M1911 Ball ammunition. In mine I prefer .455 Eley equivalent loads with the Accurate 45-264D bullet and 4 grains of Bullseye for 720 fps, which is accurate despire the shallow rifling.
Later US M1917s assembled after the residual British frames and parts were used up have purpose-built .45 ACP cylinders having the familiar square stop surface so that loose .45 ACP rounds can fired without the clips. These heat treated are safe with any normal .45 ACP loads, both standard and +P.
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Last edited by Outpost75; 03-28-2020 at 06:09 PM.
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I'd always heard they were the same as far as loading.
The moon clips came along since the world was going over to .45ACP and moving away from the .45 revolver.
It'd let you or the military use the readily available ACPs and the govt. didn't have to stock the auto rim ammo any more,
but they could keep feeding the revolvers they still had.
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I meant to say that the 45 CAL auto rim cartridge was developed after WW1, in the 1920,s for the hunting/ target shooters.
When I started loading AR's for my 1917's, I measured the water capacity of a random ACP case and a Starline AR case. One held 25 gr. of water, the other 26. Not enough difference to matter.
That has been my experience exactly. Actually, "soft" bullets tend to lead much worse that quenched ones.
This is interesting because 45 ACP ammunition from the beginning was loaded to 19,000 psi, although back in the day the units may have been CUP. So how would these cylinders have withstood the pressure of the 19,000 psi cartridge?
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