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Carsten
01-10-2015, 07:17 AM
Hi.

I am working up a load for my 6.5" S&W 629.
I am using the Lee 310gr. boolit with GC run through a .430 sizer and cast to 318gr.

The boolits come out as .431 but my cylinder throats are just at hair over .430 so the boolits will make a pretty tight fit in the throats.

I think I am close to the max load using 18gr. VV N110 and an COL of 1.1654.
This gives 1200 fps but without any apparent pressure signs.

The accuracy is pretty good so the question is about pressure vs. the tight throats.

I use the rear cannelure and the boolits are just touching the throats without any "free flight" what so ever.

Is this a bad thing pressure wise?
Like when loading jacketed rifle bullets touching the lands will raise pressure, will this be the case here as well?

I do not think so but would like your opinions about this matter.

Tatume
01-10-2015, 08:31 AM
Hello Carsten,

It sounds to me like you have an excellent load. Having cast bullet diameters somewhat larger than the cylinder throats is fine. Optimal accuracy will occur when the range is between 0.0005" smaller and 0.0010" larger. Perfectly acceptable accuracy can be obtained with bullets larger still. Oversized cast bullets will be swaged to throat diameter, and undersized cast bullets that are not more that 0.0005" smaller will be "bumped up" to throat diameter.

The diameter of a cast bullet changes several times during the process of being fired. In addition to the transitions above, they will usually swell somewhat at the barrel/cylinder gap and will expand to fill the forcing cone. They will then be reduced to the diameter of the barrel. It is here that trouble occurs with extremely high pressure, as these transitions stress the breech of the barrel. The 454 Casull is a cartridge that can cause splitting of the barrel breech, and accelerated wear of the forcing cone if bullets that are too soft are used. This is also the reason S&W redesigned the L-frame revolver to create the M69 44 Magnum. They needed more steel in this critical transition area.

The point is, having your bullets sufficiently hard is more important than diameter, within the limits above. I like 2/3/95 tin/antimony/lead alloy for magnum revolver applications. My bullets have a hardness of 13 BHN when air cooled.

Take care, Tom

leftiye
01-10-2015, 08:34 AM
First, what does your bore slug? That sounds like you may have undersized throats. My model 29 uses .432" boolits, and yes I did open them up. Boolits larger than your chamber throats will definitely increase pressure, but this is negated by you working up your loads But it will also negatively affect your accuracy. Size 'em down or open up the throats if they are not a thou. larger than bore already.

Tatume
01-10-2015, 08:36 AM
P.s., there are different opinions on this matter, and also sources of potential bias. Use care.

Carsten
01-10-2015, 08:42 AM
I have not slugged the bore yet but I will do so shortly.
I have used 3 different bullets in this gun:
Magtech 44 special CAS loads (just to get more brass).
Plated .429 240gr. swaged bullets.
Lee 310gr. cast boolits.
All have given excellent accuracy.

RobS
01-10-2015, 08:56 AM
Compare your velocity that you are getting with your current max load of VV N110 behind a 325 grain cast bullet. If the 1200 fps is what you have personally chronographed and it's not over the max velocity published data for like powder/bullet combo then you are probably fine. If you haven't chronographed anything then??? we are just guesstimating and proceed with caution. If loads are worked up and velocities are charted then being a bit over the cylinder throat diameter can be ok; this has been done by many experienced handloaders before and is nothing new in reloading cast boolits.

As been said there are opinions both ways. I've loaded for both situations myself (sized to cylinder throat diameter and then .001 over) and simply verified velocities with my chronograph. Noting this though, to be on the safe side I stayed under max load velocities by 50 fps or more.

RobS
01-10-2015, 08:59 AM
I seen from your post you are also using 44 special brass. If you are loading 44 mag middle to max it's probably wise to use 44 mag brass not the 44 special.

Carsten
01-10-2015, 10:08 AM
I always chronograph when working up loads.
The 1200 fps is measured out of my gun.
I could not find any data for this boolit/powder combo but 1200 fps should be possible within SAAMI pressure with this boolit loaded long.
It also looks fine in Quickload.
The brass is CBC (Magtech) 44 Magnum and primers CCI 300.

RobS
01-10-2015, 12:48 PM
I don't know a lot about N110 as I've not used it. There are others out there who have used it though and here is an article that speaks just a bit about the powder with a 295 grain Keith style boolit.
http://www.sixguns.com/tests/tt44mag.htm

As I look across some of the heavier cast boolit loads out on the net coupled along with comparing some of 300 grain jacketed max loads on the Vihta Vuori website, I think you are within reason and not over pressure. If accuracy is where you want it then it looks like you are good to go.

Silver Jack Hammer
01-10-2015, 01:52 PM
Colt will not reduce the size of the their cylinder throats on the Model P single action army out of concern of over pressure. Even though consumers request Colt reduce the cylinder throats for accuracy. Brian Pierce, probably the most published single action writer currently has data which shows reduced cylinder throats do not increase chamber pressures and he has communicated this to Colt.

Interesting too, Brian Pierce has written that test results also jacketed boolits which are assumabley harder than lead alloy do not increase chamber pressures either.

Piedmont
01-10-2015, 02:02 PM
Colt will not reduce the size of the their cylinder throats on the Model P single action army out of concern of over pressure. Even though consumers request Colt reduce the cylinder throats for accuracy.

Colt.......keeping us all safe from accuracy!

Silver Jack Hammer
01-10-2015, 03:13 PM
Haha, that's great. I've got a buddy that keeps a little money coming in on the side re-cutting .38 cylinders to properly dimensioned .44 Specials. Wouldn't want to break his rice bowl.

leftiye
01-11-2015, 07:14 AM
[QUOTE= Silver Jack Hammer Interesting too, Brian Pierce has written that test results also jacketed boolits which are assumably harder than lead alloy do not increase chamber pressures either.[/QUOTE]

It has been axiomatic forever that jacketed bullets produce higher pressures and lower velocities than equal weight boolits at the same charges. Anybody with a chronograph and a micrometer can verify this.

Silver Jack Hammer
01-11-2015, 11:53 AM
Chronographs cannot be counted on as a method to measure pressure. Neither did the CUP system to measure pressure end up telling us the whole story.

leftiye
01-12-2015, 07:54 AM
Nobody said anything about chronographs measuring pressure. But if you load the same load in two cases, one with cast, and one with jacketed, you should be able to see the VELOCITIES of the two and compare them.

Nor did I say anything about CUPs. Unless the cases were identical, you should be able to see if one showed more pressure sign than the other. Nope, I still didn't say you could measure pressure that way, only comparatively. If you know how.

Silver Jack Hammer
01-12-2015, 10:31 AM
"It has been axiomatic forever that jacketed bullets produce higher pressures and lower velocities than equal weight boolits at the same charges. Anybody with a chronograph and a micrometer can verify this."

"Nobody said anything about chronographs measuring pressure"

????????

Clark
01-13-2015, 04:19 AM
The big bullet in a small bore making no pressure increase is counter intuitive.
Likewise the pinched bullet in the chamber making a huge pressure spike is counter intuitive.
The way I reconcile it is to think in the time domain.
If the peak pressure of powder burn is not concurrent with the increase pressure to swage, the peak pressure does not change.
And if the pinched bullet delays the start of bullet acceleration, the increased pressure makes the powder burn faster which increases pressure which makes the powder burn faster ....

This phenomena of large bullets working in a small bore without pressure spikes is documented in P.O. Ackley 1966 "Handbook for Shooters and Reloaders Vol 2" chapter 7 "additional pressure tests":

"..30 cal barrel pressure barrel was fitted to the test gun, but the neck and throat was enlarged to accept the 8mm bullet, with the bore
remaining the standard 30 caliber. A Remington factory 30-06 cartridge with the 150 gr bullet had been tested and previously gave 57,300 psi, for a velocity of 3030 fps. The the bullets were pulled from two more Remington 150 grain cartridges and were replaced with 8mm 150 grain bullets. To everyone's surprise, although the velocity was rather erratic, these loads averaged 2901 fps, with a pressure of 40,700 psi."

Silver Jack Hammer
01-13-2015, 12:07 PM
Clark: Very interesting post. Thank you for that.

Although not on point to this threat because it does not specifically address the pressure level at the cylinder throat, the NRA doing pressure tests made the following observation:

Several years ago the NRA fired a number of loads with Bullseye, Unique and 2400 with a half dozen cast boolit designs in .44 Special. A 429421 weighing 231.8 gr fired over 16.5 gr of 2400 chronographed at 1,148.1 fps from a 6.5 inch pressure barrel at 16,880 psi. The second load featured a Lyman 431215 gas check weighing 222.6 over 17 gr of 2400 that averaged 1,091.9 fps and 19,050 psi from the pressure test barrel. In reviewing the results, the NRA noted that the slightly lighter gas check boolit produced less velocity at a greater pressure than the plain base 429421 did over .5 gr less powder.

The NRA tested the Lyman 429422 hollow base SWC at 237 gr fired over 16.5 and 16.0 gr of 2400. Pressure test for the heavier powder charge was recorded at 21,370 psi and velocity was recorded at 1,197 fps. The lesser charge produced 16,930 psi and 1,130.5 fps. In this test the .5 gr increase in powder generated an additional 66.5 fps in velocity and 4,440 psi more pressure.

Clark, your post is more spot on than mine but I thought I'd share too.

Carsten
01-22-2015, 06:39 PM
I did some more testing with the 1200 fps load today.
Many of the cases will fall free of the cylinder without using the ejecting rod.
Is this a false sense of security?

Silver Jack Hammer
01-22-2015, 10:20 PM
Carsten: Yes. How easy the spent cases fall out is no indicator for pressure as a sign of over or under pressure.

leftiye
01-23-2015, 06:26 AM
Well when you get through contradicting all of the knowledge that has been known since the last ice age, please explore how you got so mislead. Cases that stick are either in dirty chambers, or have been expanded enough to stick. Pressure is necessary to do this.

leftiye
01-23-2015, 04:36 PM
The big bullet in a small bore making no pressure increase is counter intuitive.
Likewise the pinched bullet in the chamber making a huge pressure spike is counter intuitive.
The way I reconcile it is to think in the time domain.
If the peak pressure of powder burn is not concurrent with the increase pressure to swage, the peak pressure does not change.
And if the pinched bullet delays the start of bullet acceleration, the increased pressure makes the powder burn faster which increases pressure which makes the powder burn faster ....

This phenomena of large bullets working in a small bore without pressure spikes is documented in P.O. Ackley 1966 "Handbook for Shooters and Reloaders Vol 2" chapter 7 "additional pressure tests":

"..30 cal barrel pressure barrel was fitted to the test gun, but the neck and throat was enlarged to accept the 8mm bullet, with the bore
remaining the standard 30 caliber. A Remington factory 30-06 cartridge with the 150 gr bullet had been tested and previously gave 57,300 psi, for a velocity of 3030 fps. The the bullets were pulled from two more Remington 150 grain cartridges and were replaced with 8mm 150 grain bullets. To everyone's surprise, although the velocity was rather erratic, these loads averaged 2901 fps, with a pressure of 40,700 psi."

I've got a .445 that I replaced the faulty factory cylinder on (un-square front face). The chambers on the original were 1.7** inches long. Loads with a nominal fire forming charge in them stick in the new cylinder. They produced almost negligible pressure signs in the original chamber. I believe the new cylinder has correct 1.6" chambers. I once had a Mini 14 that produced (for a while) 10" vertical stringing at 100 yds. This with 1.5" horizontal measurements. It was blowing primers periodically. I found that the case mouths (uncrimped) were hitting the sharp edge of the chamber opening when feeding. This produced a ding that pinched the bullets and buggered the pressures. I used a cannelure maker and crimped and the problem ceased to occur.

BTW, I agree with (like) your time/ burning rate theories, both of them.

Char-Gar
01-23-2015, 06:20 PM
Hi.

I am working up a load for my 6.5" S&W 629.
I am using the Lee 310gr. boolit with GC run through a .430 sizer and cast to 318gr.

The boolits come out as .431 but my cylinder throats are just at hair over .430 so the boolits will make a pretty tight fit in the throats.

I think I am close to the max load using 18gr. VV N110 and an COL of 1.1654.
This gives 1200 fps but without any apparent pressure signs.

The accuracy is pretty good so the question is about pressure vs. the tight throats.

I use the rear cannelure and the boolits are just touching the throats without any "free flight" what so ever.

Is this a bad thing pressure wise?
Like when loading jacketed rifle bullets touching the lands will raise pressure, will this be the case here as well?

I do not think so but would like your opinions about this matter.

Fire away! You are good to go!

Silver Jack Hammer
01-26-2015, 09:57 AM
leftiye, Carsten asked if cases falling free of the cylinder without using the ejecting rod is a false sense of security that pressures are safe. To which I said yes. Your comment about cases stick due to pressure or dirt is true but not related to a subject I posted.

Char-Gar has already assured Carsten that the load in question is good to go.

The question raised about gauging pressure by how easily brass falls from the cylinder is a serious one. Although Carsten was referring to his Model 629, he also has a Colt SAA. We need to encourage handloaders to rely on data published by reliable sources rather than false indicators such as how easily brass falls from the cylinder, flattened primers, reside around the mouth and all the other wives tales that are not indicators of pressure, equally true split brass is not an indicator of excessive pressure. Brass falls from the cylinder of my .357’s and .44 Mags which are fired with pressures that are within SAAMI specs in these calibers but are not safe is a SAA nor rated for a .45 Colt.

Pressure is measured two ways; by the older crusher pressure measurement system or the newer piezoelectric pressure system which uses a sensor called a transducer. The new electronic transducer was revolutionary in that we realized the old system of CUP was not telling whole story. Loads published as safe when tested by the CUP system were showing dangerous pressure spikes with the piezoelectric system.

Leftiye, your comment that jacketed boolits produce higher pressures and lower velocities than equal weight boolits at the same charges with lead is a comment I would not disagree with. But if you posted this in response to my post that Brian Pierce has written that test results with jacketed boolits which are assumabley harder than lead alloy do not increase chamber pressures in tight cylinder throats, we are talking about two different issues. Let me better explain my post. The title of this thread is Pressure vs. Tight Cylinder Throats. I posted that Brian Pierce has data which indicates that reducing cylinder throats does not increase chamber pressures. His data that reduced cylinder throats do not increase chamber pressures do not increase chamber pressure with either cast or with jacketed boolits, which are assumabley harder than lead. I had no intention of indicating anything about comparing the pressure of jacketed boolits to cast boolits.

Dave Scovill has boolits fired from revolvers with oversized cylinders with the barrels removed and captured in a soft stop such as a box of wet newspapers. With Lyman #2 lead the base of the boolits upset and flare significantly. His point is that we have been shooting lead boolits out of revolvers with oversized cylinder throats but the boolits have been swelling to fill the oversized throats thus forming a gas seal. This has been going on since the dawn of the revolver and there have no problems even tho there are those out there that believe oversized cylinder throats reduce chamber pressures and cylinder throats too tight drive up the pressures.

Scovill adds that these boolits which upset at the base forming a gas seal then squeeze down to the smaller bore diameter when they enter the forcing cone and there never has been any danger in this. He suggested that maybe the fact that the boolit has already moved forward from the case when it engages the cylinder throat might be a reason we don’t see this pressure spike.

Carsten
01-26-2015, 10:35 AM
Silver Jack Hammer,

Thank you for the explanation.


He suggested that maybe the fact that the boolit has already moved forward from the case when it engages the cylinder throat might be a reason we don’t see this pressure spike.

Which is why I asked the question in the first place.

As I wrote in the first post the boolits are just touching the throats and has no "free flight"

Multigunner
01-26-2015, 11:00 AM
Extensive testing of tight bore target barrels and tight chamber throats has indicated that a tight throat will raise chamber pressure, while a tight bore with normal throat dimensions makes little difference in chamber pressures.

Squeeze bore rifles and anti-tank guns were built in the 30's and 40's with no serious chamber pressure issues.

A lightly pitted bore will allow well lubed cast boolits to reach higher velocities at the same charge levels than a comparable jacketed bullet.
The lube fills in the pits as incompressable globules that act like semi-liquid ball bearings. They established that long ago.

I figure a very tight, rough or undersized throat in a revolver cylinder would have to increase chamber pressures.

leftiye
01-27-2015, 09:39 AM
[Quote We need to encourage handloaders to rely on data published by reliable sources rather than false indicators such as how easily brass falls from the cylinder, flattened primers, reside around the mouth and all the other wives tales that are not indicators of pressure, equally true split brass is not an indicator of excessive pressure. Quote] SJH

Reloading manuals can get you killed! At the best they only say what was safe in somebody else's gun. One needs to be able to judge pressures to be able to work up (or not) from starting loads safely, even if from a manual. I had a Remington 25-06 fry a case into the bolt face - had to beat the bolt open, and beat the case out of the bolt face - with a starting load once. That load would probly have blown up a Mauser. They are NOT the end all point, and only the starting point if you are lucky.

Actually, if the case comes out easily you are no where near damaging your revolver.

leftiye
01-27-2015, 10:18 AM
"Brian Pierce, probably the most published single action writer currently has data which shows reduced cylinder throats do not increase chamber pressures and he has communicated this to Colt."

Only true if boolits fit the reduced throats. Reduced throats would increase pressure if the original boolits were used.

[ Quote Interesting too, Brian Pierce has written that test results also jacketed boolits which are assumabley harder than lead alloy do not increase chamber pressures either. Quote] SJH

But this is in another paragraph with no reference to it being about reduced chamber mouths. Regardless, pressures will always be higher with jacketed than with cast, all things else being equal. If the bullet or Boolit gets jammed into a chamber mouth that is too small, things will only get worse.

DougGuy
01-27-2015, 10:24 AM
Hello Carsten, Having cast bullet diameters somewhat larger than the cylinder throats is fine.

"Having cast bullet diameters somewhat larger than the cylinder throats is fine. <<-- DO NOT believe this statement.

I do not buy into the theory that undersized throats do not cause higher pressures than properly sized throats. IF this were true, then consider this.. Recoil with a SA revolver directly affects point of impact of the boolit. Right or wrong? Every sixgunner knows this is correct, even the gun makers know it is correct because they install taller front sights on the longer barreled revolvers to compensate for how recoil affects the longer barreled gun.

Pressure, dictates recoil. Period. This is a LAW of PHYSICS. Every action creates an equal but opposite reaction. Proven, documented, take it to the bank.

Pressure from a hardcast boolit having to be swaged down by a tight cylinder throat will make a revolver shoot as much as 4" to 6" higher than where the sights were aimed, in as little as 25yards. Reaming the cylinder throats and removing the constriction will make the same revolver with the same load strike the target MUCH LOWER than it did before reaming.

IF and I say IF the theory of varying cylinder throat diameters having no effect on pressure was true, which it is NOT, then there would be NO CHANGE of the boolit's impact on the target, since there would be no difference in pressure, and therefore no difference in the amount of recoil generated by firing.

Let's take that a little farther. We all know better than to fire a gun with an obstructed barrel. IF and I say IF an obstruction was great enough, it would cause the gun to to KABOOM! WE all know that this is a very valid explanation for how to blow up a gun. Now... Firing through a constricted barrel OR undersize cylinder throats is firing through an obstruction of sorts. It may not be great enough to cause a KB, but IF the load in question was near max to begin with, and then fired into a constricted barrel, pressures can go sky high. They can spike high enough to cause a catastrophic event. THIS is why it is NOT OKAY to size boolits greater than the cylinder throat diameter.




Like when loading jacketed rifle bullets touching the lands will raise pressure, will this be the case here as well?

I do not think so but would like your opinions about this matter.

Carsten, cylinder throats are made to guide the boolit to the barrel, and they work best when the boolit will slide into the throats with minimal resistance. The true answer to your question is YES. Any resistance provided against the movement boolit will cause pressures to increase as opposed to the same exact load with less or no resistance to the movement of the boolit.

Piedmont
01-27-2015, 12:01 PM
Pressure, dictates recoil. Period. This is a LAW of PHYSICS. Every action creates an equal but opposite reaction. Proven, documented, take it to the bank.

Pressure from a hardcast boolit having to be swaged down by a tight cylinder throat will make a revolver shoot as much as 4" to 6" higher than where the sights were aimed, in as little as 25yards. Reaming the cylinder throats and removing the constriction will make the same revolver with the same load strike the target MUCH LOWER than it did before reaming.

With regards to the first paragraph quoted I can load a 200 grain bullet in a .44 mag to higher pressures than a 240 grain and it will recoil less. So I guess that isn't a law of physics.

With regards to the second paragraph quoted, didn't it occur to you that you were likely changing the dwell time in the firearm?

DougGuy
01-27-2015, 12:51 PM
Yes the dwell time is partially the cause of shooting to a higher point of aim, but there isn't this huge slowing down of velocity with those loads, so it cannot possibly be all attributed to dwell time. Some of it is from pressure.

I apologize, I did not correctly type out what I meant to say, I meant to say that pressure behind the boolit mass dictates recoil.

Multigunner
01-27-2015, 01:10 PM
Well I have a very old top break .32 revolver. I loaded BP loads with a .375 ball swaged down to .314.
When I first fired a cylinder full the hinge pin of the top latch bent loosening the action, the fired cases were difficult to extract.
I examined the throats and found a deep crust of old rust and fouling. I cleaned the throats down to bare steel and polished away some surface roughness. Now the same loads don't bend that now straightened hinge pin and cases eject with ease.

If hardened fouling in the throats can raise pressure then a too small dia throat can raise pressure.
Of course BP has different burning qualities than modern smokeless powders.

leftiye
01-27-2015, 07:50 PM
Yes the dwell time is partially the cause of shooting to a higher point of aim, but there isn't this huge slowing down of velocity with those loads, so it cannot possibly be all attributed to dwell time. Some of it is from pressure.

I apologize, I did not correctly type out what I meant to say, I meant to say that pressure behind the boolit mass dictates recoil.

Basically true. Pressure, probly velocity achieved, amount of powder/burning rate has effect (jet of gasses at muzzle produces recoil), and projectile weight pretty much cover recoil. Your logic carries regardless, a good explanation IMO.

Firearm weight coupled with this produces felt or free recoil (if I have my terms right).

Silver Jack Hammer
01-27-2015, 08:01 PM
A .32 loaded with BP would generate very low pressure, 18 grains of FFg would send a 100 gr. boolit about 800 fps, within the 12,000 CUP range when .357 magnum loads are rated at 35,000. BP is dirty, and SASS shooters shoot lots of BP at 100 + round matches, I have. BP does cause fouling and cases to get sticky, that's why Colt's put the big round bullseye head on the end of the ejector rod - to eject the sticky cases even when the fouling builds up. These Colt BP guns were used in the dirtiest of conditions from the American frontier to Cuba to SASS matches. I don't believe the fouling restricted the chamber mouths to build up pressure.

DougGuy, leftiye, we need to clean up our language. Your comments about cylinder throats referred to them as "undersized." Your familiarity with Rugers likely defaulted to your having seen lots of Rugers with "undersized" chamber throats. The solution is to bore them out to proper dimentions. I'm talking about Colt's and use the term "tight" cylinder throats. In the Colt world our .45 cylinder throats tend to run about .456" - .457" from the factory. .44 Special cylinder throats run about .434" - .455" from the factory. Us Colt guys buy .38 cylinders and have them bored to proper .452" in the .45 and .431" in the .44 Special. USFA was very proud of the fact their guns came from the factory with cylinder throats on par with custom work. If we refer to cylinder throat size by the numbers clarity might materialize.

I have a custom cylinder in a .44 Special Colt, and I have a factory cylinder for the same gun, plus a .44-40 cylinder for the same gun. Maybe I have too much time on my hands but I shoot different loads, different powders, different boolits etc., through this gun and I keep the targets. The cylinder with "tight" throats .431" hits the same elevation to the same point of aim the same as the factory cylinder with "oversized" .434" diameter cylinder throats when I compare the same loads through the two different cylinders. Believe me I am testing for the magic combination for the tightest group.

If boolits cast with Lyman #2 upset at the base to form a gas seal when fired through an "oversized" .456" .45 and .434" .44 Special cylinder throat, then firing the same boolit through a "tight" cylinder throat .431" .44 Special would only also form a gas seal too. There would be no overpressure because both boolits sealed the cylinder throat regardless of it's diameter. That's what Skovill was saying when he fired different boolits through revolvers with the barrels removed. The base of the boolits expanded - a lot. More than the diameter of the oversized cylinder throats. I cast with ww, and I mix 4 parts Linotype with 6 parts ww, and I've cast with straight Linotype. I have sized .44 Special to .429, .430 and .431" and I've sized .45 Colt to .452" and .454" but my point of of impact does not change. I am persuaded that Scovill is right.

I have read Brian Pearce for years and he publishes results of tests on cylinders from the M29, SBH, SRH, USFA, Colt and Smith including the incredible results of the 5 shot L frame. I'm confident none of what he has said refers to "undersized" cylinder throats, he is talking to us SA shooters who spend money on having custom cylinders bored out and fitted to our guns and compared to factory cylinders. If it's Colt, the cylinder throats are not undersized. Colt barrels are tight. I had a .45 with a bore diameter of .450". It's cylinder throats were .456". Colt barrels are .427. I'm referring here to the SAA Model.

DougGuy
01-27-2015, 08:55 PM
I had a 4 5/8" BH convertible in the 90s, it shot horribly and leaded the daylights out of the barrel. I found the throats were .456" on both cylinders. I don't remember which came first, firelapping or Ruger replacing the cylinders with two that had .4515" throats as requested. I shot .451" boolits back then, mostly linotype, I mostly didn't know much about the throat to bore relationship except that it really turned it around and made a great shooter out of it afterwards. Had I known how to slug throats and/or barrels, had I known what a thread choke was, I could have been much more ahead of the game but I was such a newb to revolver dimensions then. I knew it was a total DOG to shoot and clean, and then it improved immensely after getting properly dimensioned throats. I should have kept it.

I had 5 or 6 1st Gen Colt SAAs that were awesome guns. None of them shot as badly as the Ruger, none of them leaded like the Ruger. Should have kept those too.

leftiye
01-28-2015, 12:07 AM
I just gotta say "So what?" PS, there's a whole new world out there, just for looking. Where people only vaguely know of Brian Pierce. And haven't yet been mislead by him.

Silver Jack Hammer
01-28-2015, 11:00 AM
leftiye, your attempts to discredit what I've posted you've had to turn my words around into saying things I did not say. The current White House occupant does that too and it's very tiresome.

Brian Pearce is well published, has been for about 10 years that I know of. He has a readership that verifies his work.

As far as your suggestion that I look into a whole world out there, film crews have come from New York and Los Angeles to document things I've done in my profession on 4 separate occasions. It's because my life is intense that I enjoy the recreation of shooting.

DougGuy
01-28-2015, 11:27 PM
If we refer to cylinder throat size by the numbers clarity might materialize.

True dat... In the last 75 or so Ruger cylinders I have done, probably 50 of those have been .45 cal, about 40% of those have been .45 ACP.

I am finding patterns of consistency. Some good, some notoriously bad, but consistent none the less.

For the most part, not all, but say 80% of the recent production medium framed guns, their throats are running right at .4505" and .451" with the occasional .4515" throat in the middle of a cylinder full of .451" holes. Unfluted cylinders run tighter, .4505" and the rollmarked Bisley cylinders are the tightest, average pilot size for the reamer is .450" for these. Older BH cylinders can be all over the place, most cylinders have uneven throats requiring me to switch pilots to maintain the very snug fit needed to keep the reamer on center.

The unfluted .44 cylinders are the most uneven. Some of them will have two of six throats .002" larger than the other four, I have to use a custom reamer sized .4324" on these old girls, as I do not like them to leave my shop unless the throats are within .0002" of each other. Not uncommon to have to use 3 different pilots on these cylinders since Ruger used 3 different reamers.

.41 cylinders show the same variances the .44 cylinders do, you have to check them for uneven throats and use the tightest fitting pilot sometimes having to switch pilots. Diameters for these range from .409" to .411" with no sense of regularity at all.

.357 cylinders are usually right at .357" and many shooters simply want to shoot .358" or .359" with the occasional request for the cylinder to be able to take .360" boolits compatible with the owner's levergun.

leftiye
01-29-2015, 07:12 AM
leftiye, your attempts to discredit what I've posted you've had to turn my words around into saying things I did not say. The current White House occupant does that too and it's very tiresome.

Brian Pearce is well published, has been for about 10 years that I know of. He has a readership that verifies his work.

As far as your suggestion that I look into a whole world out there, film crews have come from New York and Los Angeles to document things I've done in my profession on 4 separate occasions. It's because my life is intense that I enjoy the recreation of shooting.

You must have failed to communicate. I cut and pasted those quotes. Didn't twist or even mis quote anything (though it seemed to me that your responses have had gobs of drift). Movie stars think they're experts on everything too. It's called false transference of authority.

Silver Jack Hammer
01-29-2015, 10:14 AM
There, you did it again.

leftiye
01-29-2015, 10:20 PM
An old Bobby Vinton song?

Carsten
02-23-2015, 04:45 AM
To be on the safe side I will downsize my boolits just a hair.
I want them to be .430 after sizing.
My Lee .430 sizer leaves them 431.
I will get a lube sizer on of the days so the question is if I should get a .429 die or an RCBS .430 will actually size them to .430?

leftiye
02-23-2015, 06:56 AM
About .005" smaller than chamber mouths is what "they" say is optimum size for boolits. .001" (to .002") larger than groove diameter is good for chamber mouths.

Silver Jack Hammer
02-23-2015, 11:15 AM
Size your boolits to fit the throats as near as possible. The base of the boolit will expand and form a gas seal at the cylinder throat anyway if your boolits are sized less than the diameter of the cylinder throat.

If your boolits are sized to within .001 or .002 over throat diameter you will be fine. Plenty of handloaders including myself have shot boolits cast and not sized at all without any problem of overpressure.

Year ago CCI/Speer did a few tests with their new half-jacket semiwadcutter in .38 Special and found boolit size did NOT contribute significantly higher pressures. Since jacketed boolits are much harder than lead alloy it is reasonable to expect oversized cast boolits will not cause a significant pressure rise over what might be expected with boolits sized to within .001 or .002 inch over cylinder throat diameter.

Stick with boolits of one in 16 alloy or Lyman #2 with a BHN (Brinell hardness number) of about 15, one in 20 is bit soft for your load but OK with faster-burning powders at lower pressure.

45r
02-23-2015, 01:41 PM
If the barrel isn't hand-lapped,fire-lap it and you'll see an improvement in accuracy.
My Ruger bisley 41 mag shot a round 2 inch a 50 and now 1 inch after fire-lapping.
It has a slightly over 2 pound trigger which helps also.

cbrick
02-23-2015, 03:04 PM
Carsten, cylinder throats are made to guide the boolit to the barrel, and they work best when the boolit will slide into the throats with minimal resistance.

From post #29, that is correct. Far too many people look at a revolvers throats as sizing dies. They are not even though they work superbly as such. No matter how big you size your bullets they will be throat diameter when they exit. From an accuracy point the bullet should be a mild snug fit in the throats and not be sized down going through the throat and then blown back out in the bore or forcing cone should the bore be a bit too small or large. The less the bullet is molested the better, they fit the throats which match the groove diameter. What exits the muzzle is what you chambered plus rifling engraving which is the difference between bore diameter and groove diameter. The sole purpose of revolver throats is to align the center line of the bullet with the center line of the bore.

Rick