Pardini 32 ACP OAL 'short vs long'
Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2020 10:32 am
I read a suggestion that Travis 64 grain LSWC-coated bullets should be loaded to the top edge of shoulder (i.e., as with 45 LSWCs) so that the round could be easily extracted if the gun needed to be cleared.
This issue is with the usual OAL of ~0.900 with Travis LSWC-coated 64-gr bullets, a chambered unfired round can be quite hard to extract because the upper shoulder of the bullet is lodged in the throat. Yanking the bolt back can leave the bullet stuck in the lands, resulting in a mess of loose powder, and the need to use a brass rod to remove stuck bullet. This putts off some shooter. However, the only time I ever had to deal this was after the load command, my red dot battery failed.
Someone recommended loading these bullets around 0.850, where just a bit of the bullets shoulder is visible above rim. It seemed like a good idea.
After testing six 0.850 OAL loadings, one ~0.900, and 22s I had in my gunboat on a Ransom Rest, I recommend to not use a shorter OAL for Travis LSWC-coated 64-gr bullets. Data are attached. Dipnet
This issue is with the usual OAL of ~0.900 with Travis LSWC-coated 64-gr bullets, a chambered unfired round can be quite hard to extract because the upper shoulder of the bullet is lodged in the throat. Yanking the bolt back can leave the bullet stuck in the lands, resulting in a mess of loose powder, and the need to use a brass rod to remove stuck bullet. This putts off some shooter. However, the only time I ever had to deal this was after the load command, my red dot battery failed.
Someone recommended loading these bullets around 0.850, where just a bit of the bullets shoulder is visible above rim. It seemed like a good idea.
After testing six 0.850 OAL loadings, one ~0.900, and 22s I had in my gunboat on a Ransom Rest, I recommend to not use a shorter OAL for Travis LSWC-coated 64-gr bullets. Data are attached. Dipnet