Hi calgunners,
I just started reloading for .38 Special because I picked up a small .38 revolver. Figured I've reloaded 9mm for quite a while, so I there shouldn't be too many issues, but I had an unusual thing come up. When I chrono'd the loads I got about half of the rounds coming up about 550-600 fps, which is about what the books were saying, but the others came out at 60-70 fps. Here are the stats:
Pistol is a Rossi M88-2 2" .38 SPC only.
158 gr Berry's flat point pill at .357 diameter.
3.6 gr titegroup
1.145 COL
Data from Hodgdon website using 158 gr XTPs as the closest analogous round.
--Bullets were hand primed and since I only loaded 20 of them for testing, I hand measured the powder, so they were all 3.6.
--Scale was calibrated twice prior to and during measuring.
--I used a Lee single stage press with a Lee .38/.357 resizing die.
--Once the bullet was seated I used light crimping.
The strange thing was that some of the projectiles remained loose (I could easily twist or pull them out), but the chrono readings were inconsistent with the loose rounds (first low reading made me check which ones were loose and if this was directly related...it wasn't.
#1: Could the die not be sizing them narrow enough?
#2: Do I just need to make the crimping a little heavier?
Thanks for any input.
I just started reloading for .38 Special because I picked up a small .38 revolver. Figured I've reloaded 9mm for quite a while, so I there shouldn't be too many issues, but I had an unusual thing come up. When I chrono'd the loads I got about half of the rounds coming up about 550-600 fps, which is about what the books were saying, but the others came out at 60-70 fps. Here are the stats:
Pistol is a Rossi M88-2 2" .38 SPC only.
158 gr Berry's flat point pill at .357 diameter.
3.6 gr titegroup
1.145 COL
Data from Hodgdon website using 158 gr XTPs as the closest analogous round.
--Bullets were hand primed and since I only loaded 20 of them for testing, I hand measured the powder, so they were all 3.6.
--Scale was calibrated twice prior to and during measuring.
--I used a Lee single stage press with a Lee .38/.357 resizing die.
--Once the bullet was seated I used light crimping.
The strange thing was that some of the projectiles remained loose (I could easily twist or pull them out), but the chrono readings were inconsistent with the loose rounds (first low reading made me check which ones were loose and if this was directly related...it wasn't.
#1: Could the die not be sizing them narrow enough?
#2: Do I just need to make the crimping a little heavier?
Thanks for any input.

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