FredB wrote:Gallery rifle shooters use a lot of ammo and reloading is an economic neccessity---as is casting your own bullets. The straight wall pistol cases use relatively heavy, thick walled brass and crimping causes this to split after only a few reloads. The 44-40 case is very thin walled and can be reloading many times without problems. I am still using some Winchester cases that i bought in the 1980s.
Fred
Oh. See now this is news, I've read more or less the exact opposite about reloading 44-40 cases, paradoxically the reason given was that the thicker straight walled cartridges were more durable - it's lucky I have an enforced waiting period where I can do nothing but read or I might've been put off! So the cases can obviously be used way more times than I'd imagined then!
dromia wrote:The use of steel dies is also no impediment to reloading the 44-40 either.
The bottle neck is so shallow that lubing every case is not necessary I just lube every 5th one whether it needs it or not.
There is a lot of nonsense, like most of the stuff on this damned internet, about loading the 44-40 and it is no more difficult, complicated or requiring care beyond that which you would give hand loading any calibre.
If you use the proper propellant, black powder, then it is even simpler with even less opportunities for load error.
Thank you, again this is all news to me and contradicts advice I've had (not on here) - it was way easier starting a hobby when all you had was library books and a bloke ur mother knows.
