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Thread: Rossi 92 load strength question

  1. #1
    Boolit Buddy greenmntranger's Avatar
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    Rossi 92 load strength question

    Was wondering how stout a load you guys are firing in your Rossi 92's. I know that the same receiver is used for the .454 Casull, but I have read that those guns got a different heat treating.
    So what is the stiffest load you guys are running through your 92's?
    Vermont...First Republic...Fourteenth State

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  2. #2
    Boolit Buddy
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    Quote Originally Posted by greenmntranger View Post
    ....So what is the stiffest load you guys are running through your 92's?
    I don't know about the other guys, but I see a significant enough increase in velocity between pistol length barrels and carbine/rifle-length barrels using book loads with the .357 that I don't need to try to find something above book.

    That may be a different story with the .44 mags and/or .45 Colts, but I don't have one of those.

  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    I have two Rossi / Puma 1892 rifles. A 45LC and a 454 Casull. I sure wish we could find out for sure if the 454 has different heat treating. I find it hard to believe they would go to the trouble of only trating certain actions and not all of them............
    Roy B
    Massachusetts

    www.rvbprecision.com

  4. #4
    Boolit Master


    Ed Barrett's Avatar
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    Several friends of mine have loaded for their Rossi's in 357 to some hot loads that I won't publish here. My 357 adds an extra 350fps to top pistol loads. Between the longer barrel and no cylinder gap, it's all I need for deer. These loads took 4 deer last year with no problem. I use my .454 for hogs, I don't know if they heat treat the .454's any differently. From what I can see the thickness of the of receiver walls are not different. The design of the 92 and clones show the genius of John Browning, it’s a scaled down 1886 Winchester. The 86 was chambered for some pretty big cartridges for their time. If the action was a bit longer it could take even more powerful cartridges. The .454 is about the max for length.

    After all that, all I can say is work the loads up very slowly. remember all the guns can take one proof load, just don't make it a steady diet.
    Ed Barrett
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  5. #5
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by rbertalotto View Post
    I have two Rossi / Puma 1892 rifles. A 45LC and a 454 Casull. I sure wish we could find out for sure if the 454 has different heat treating. I find it hard to believe they would go to the trouble of only trating certain actions and not all of them............
    Since you have one of each, if you could find someone with access to a Rockwell tester, you could have each one tested, you could get a real good idea, assuming both are made from the same steel. Either way you would know if one is harder than the other.

    G

  6. #6
    Boolit Master helice's Avatar
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    Talking M-92 devotion!

    GMR
    I have a stainless LSI Puma in 45 Colt. I've driven a 250 grain J-word with a load of Lil'Gun that was a full grain less than published maximum. The Chrony reported 1850'/s and the butt plate reported that was far enough. The 44 Mag. and 45 Colts can make a 92 no fun to shoot from a bench. I don't see any point in hot-rodding it past Max Published. Every time I take people out to shoot, the M-92 in 357 Mag wins the popularity contest.
    Last edited by helice; 08-17-2011 at 10:37 PM. Reason: punctuation

  7. #7
    Boolit Buddy
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    I have one of the Rossi 454s and use a sissy pad on it with full tilt loads. It gets pretty rough off the bench. But to stay on subject it was reported on anothe forum that the receivers and bolt for the 454 model DO receive a special heat treatment to take that high pressure. Industry standarrd pressure is 53,000 CUP! And yes the receivers ARE their standard 92 model cept for the extra heat treatment.

    T-o-m

  8. #8
    Boolit Master
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    Mine gets downright painful with full bore loads...(crescent butt plate) But they take Ruger and TC loads just fine (assuming that you're talking about 45 Colt)

    Dan

  9. #9
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    i load my 44 mag pretty hot, around 1800 FPS and it shoots good, you can def. feel it i do that with the lee 310 big mammas

    Link23

  10. #10
    Boolit Master
    garym1a2's Avatar
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    The .357 takes about all the 2400 you can put in a case. But, I find 6 grain of Unique to be a good all around load and 3 grain of bullseye to be a fun plinker in the 38case.

  11. #11
    Boolit Buddy greenmntranger's Avatar
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    Thanks for all the input guys. I cross posted this question on a couple sites and have got back the same answer. The Rossi will handle just about everything my shoulder can.

    In searching for info on the .454 Casull heat treat question, I found some anecdotal, "I read this on the company web site" statements but nothing conclusive.

    GMR
    Vermont...First Republic...Fourteenth State

    "A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity"....Sigmund Freud

    Bureaucracy,, taking the fun out of life one stupid rule at a time,,,,

  12. #12
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by rbertalotto View Post
    I have two Rossi / Puma 1892 rifles. A 45LC and a 454 Casull. I sure wish we could find out for sure if the 454 has different heat treating. I find it hard to believe they would go to the trouble of only trating certain actions and not all of them............
    The difference between the H&R SB1 and SB2 actions is due to the difference in heat treating. They start as the same alloy. Got this from the factory several years ago.

  13. #13
    Boolit Master
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    I have one of the .454. I like the recoil pad and also the tube feed. I wish the same gun were available chambered for the .45 Colt.

    Anything I am going to shoot could be handled with a heavy .45 load and since my shoulder surgery that is all I want to risk in such a light gun. .45 Colt brass is cheaper, more readily available, and the slightly shorter length would permit ballistically more efficient bullets with longer ogives. IMO the .454 is gilding the lily.

  14. #14
    Boolit Buddy Doc.Holliday's Avatar
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    Evening;
    My stoutest load in my Rossi 92 Trapper ; 45 colt; is 22 gr of 4227 with a CCI 350 primer and 250 gr Dardas RNFP cast bullet. Use this load at your own risk
    Works for me and my gun and will dispatch anything I ask it to
    I also have a Rossi Ranch Hand using this recipe.
    Regards
    Doc.

  15. #15
    Boolit Buddy Snyd's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by greenmntranger View Post
    Thanks for all the input guys. I cross posted this question on a couple sites and have got back the same answer. The Rossi will handle just about everything my shoulder can.

    In searching for info on the .454 Casull heat treat question, I found some anecdotal, "I read this on the company web site" statements but nothing conclusive.

    GMR
    http://findarticles.com/p/articles/m...9/ai_99145185/


    "When the Puma .454 arrived, the first thing I did was to call Glen Ruh at Legacy Sports International to ask him how Rossi had been able to adapt the 1892 design to the hot Casull cartridge. Ruh explained that the metallurgy and heat treatment had been modified to handle the high pressure and that the carbine had been thoroughly torture tested by H.P. White Laboratories using standard factory ammunition."

    Standard factory 454 ammo is usually 65000psi stuff. I shoot 335-355-425gr at 1800-1700-1500ish.

  16. #16
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance Four Fingers of Death's Avatar
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    You will run out of shoulder before the gun runs out of strength.
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  17. #17
    Boolit Master pmer's Avatar
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    http://www.leverguns.com/articles/pa...ltlevergun.htm

    Here is a good article on the Rossi and it kinda ranks other lever actions in strength too.

    I have one in .45 Colt and it handles 300 grain boolits at 1600 FPS with no trouble. Execpt mine shoots Ruger/TC loads lower than SAA loads.

  18. #18
    Boolit Buddy greenmntranger's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pmer View Post
    http://www.leverguns.com/articles/pa...ltlevergun.htm

    Here is a good article on the Rossi and it kinda ranks other lever actions in strength too.

    I have one in .45 Colt and it handles 300 grain boolits at 1600 FPS with no trouble. Execpt mine shoots Ruger/TC loads lower than SAA loads.

    Thanks for the article. VERY informative. With all the input, I am now confident I can shoot ANY commercial ammo and most any handloads I am willing to mix up
    Vermont...First Republic...Fourteenth State

    "A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity"....Sigmund Freud

    Bureaucracy,, taking the fun out of life one stupid rule at a time,,,,

  19. #19
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance Four Fingers of Death's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pmer View Post
    http://www.leverguns.com/articles/pa...ltlevergun.htm

    Here is a good article on the Rossi and it kinda ranks other lever actions in strength too.

    I have one in .45 Colt and it handles 300 grain boolits at 1600 FPS with no trouble. Execpt mine shoots Ruger/TC loads lower than SAA loads.
    Must be getting out of the barrel quicker or something like that.
    "I'll help you down the trail and proud to!" Rooster Cogburn.

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    Psycholigist to Sniper; 'What did you feel when you shot the felon Sargeant?'
    Sniper to Psycholigist; 'Recoil Ma'am.'

    From my Irish Ancestors: "You've got to do your own growing, no matter how tall your grandfather was."

  20. #20
    In Remebrance


    Bret4207's Avatar
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    IME the little Rossi get's rather violent on the back end with full house factory stuff. Even with a recoil pad it's just not fun. I think that will be the limit.

    I can't think of anything in the northeast I wouldn't take on with my little Puma 44 and a 260 gr Keith boolit.

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