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Boolseye
01-06-2018, 04:19 PM
I’m looking at purchasing a mold for a super Redhawk Toklat in 454 Casull, and want to know if a slug of this size will shoot well and stabilize in this caliber.
I know that data exists for a 500 grain, but I thought I’d throw it out there anyway.
-BE

DocSavage
01-06-2018, 06:03 PM
I've fired a 400 gr sized down 45/70 cast bullet in a 45 Colt case out of a T/C Contender eons ago but a 500 gr not sure it would fit in the cylinder. My 500 gr 45/70 bullets are 3/4 the length of a 500 S&W case.

Boolseye
01-06-2018, 07:18 PM
This particular slug is Accurate’s 45-500S, designed for the S&W 460 Magnum.


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Ben
01-06-2018, 07:35 PM
Be VERY careful with long heavy slugs.
Your cylinder length will limit the OAL of the loaded round.
This in turn will cause you to be forced to " deep seat " a bullet of that weight.
The added weight and the reduced internal capacity inside the case are a less than ideal combination in the pressure dept. Pressures can and will get out of hand in a hurry.

Ben

Boolseye
01-07-2018, 04:11 AM
Thanks for the heads up, we’ll stay vigilant.


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fixit
01-09-2018, 12:02 AM
there was an article about a gentleman who went on the very same search as yours in either guns illustrated or gun digest some years back, i just cant't tell you which year it was. he worked up a subsonic load for a freedom arms revolver, which required a faster-than-factory twist to stablise. the bullet was also a custom job, carrying a mostly wadcutter profile. his purpose was to use it for elk hunting at under 50 yards, and at that range, it would almost go through an elk from end to end!

Boolseye
01-09-2018, 10:15 AM
Good stuff, thanks. I’m passing all of this along.

44MAG#1
01-11-2018, 03:48 PM
You would have to seat a 500 gr so deep in the case that I WOULD THINK the slow twist of Rugers 454 would not stabilize due to the low velocity. You are limited by cylinder length.
In a 1-24 twist I wouldn't go over 360 really. I have used two different 410 gr bullets in a FA 454 and they barely stabilized.
I have used those two aforementioned bullets in a 4.2" Redhawk 45 Colt with good stabilization and accuracy.

Boolseye
01-11-2018, 06:31 PM
Thanks–we decided to pass on the big 500. And yeah, it's a 1-24" twist. We'll stick with the 300 and the 350.
I imagine a 250 gr. HP would scream...

Lloyd Smale
01-12-2018, 06:30 AM
a 350 grain bullet at 1200 fps will shoot through about anything end to end. I never even bothered with anything heavier in my 454s.

softpoint
01-12-2018, 02:23 PM
I have used 405 grains in the .45 colt. One of the problems to be aware of, if the cases have internal taper, the boolits may need to be seated so deeply that the cases will bulge and the rounds won't chamber.

Ironduke
01-14-2018, 02:10 PM
I have shot many, many 395 gr Cast Performance WFNGC bullets in my Ruger SRH 454. They shoot better than I can hold, I'm pretty sure. The ones I've dug from the sand backstop could be loaded again except for the rifling grooves. I am working on a 300 Cast bullet now using Lee mold.

rwadley
01-15-2018, 09:33 PM
there was an article about a gentleman who went on the very same search as yours in either guns illustrated or gun digest some years back, i just cant't tell you which year it was. he worked up a subsonic load for a freedom arms revolver, which required a faster-than-factory twist to stablise. the bullet was also a custom job, carrying a mostly wadcutter profile. his purpose was to use it for elk hunting at under 50 yards, and at that range, it would almost go through an elk from end to end!

That would be P.A Widegren in Handloader's Digest 1996 (15th edition).

fixit
01-16-2018, 06:08 PM
That would be the one. Obviously, I remembered the publication wrong! That’s way more years back than I realized! Aging memory sucks!

rwadley
01-18-2018, 09:16 PM
His name makes me laugh.