Thanks guys.W296 and H110 are the same powder. Do not attempt light loads with these powders. For full power loads, 22-24 grains is the range.
Reloading manuals have varied considerably over the years. 20 grains is most likely safe, but I have found the 22-24 grain range to be reliable. A steady diet of 24 grainers will loosen up a good pistol over timeThanks guys.
Yup Mike. Your “reduced loads” comment is my concern. I found a bag of 50 reloads in my cabinet that I thought I could give him. In the bag was my info sheet I put in every bag. It has “20 grains win296” written on it. The bag is maybe ten years old and that load didn’t sound right.
I used to shoot my 44 as my main target gun and loaded thousands of rounds for it. Here I am, ten years later, scratching my head. I know I would have loaded from a manual and I always tested loads in my gun before loading a bunch to shoot.
I searched the Hodgdon site and saw their data. I’m wondering what book I might have gotten the info from.
I’m going to pull these apart and give the guy a box of factory rounds I have. I’m just scratching my memory banks, wondering where I got this load.
Getting old sucks!
That’s it! Thank you very much for that pic! Now I know I’m not “losing it”! I usually loaded on the lighter side to be easier on the gun (and my wrist) but the “internet” was saying 20 grains was dangerous.Hornady photo. 23 grs , W296, with my cast 250 lswc works well. Magnum primers.
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This comes from the early 1996 Winchester 296 data. Not to reduce the powder charge as listed.dangerous
Very true of my Smith & Wesson 29-2. Even 23 grs is a bit much with 250 gr lswc.A steady diet of 24 grainers will loosen up a good pistol over time
Yup, that's the way almost all the powders run in 30 Carbine. Only a one grain spread min to max. Love to shoot them, hate to feed them.... Be careful and have fun.starting load and max load were only 1 grain different