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Old January 14, 2013, 02:23 PM   #3
david_r
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Join Date: January 9, 2013
Posts: 131
unless you have the skill to work up a custom load, that probably isn't a good idea. Look inside one and compare it to your 40. Trim one to length and then compare the volume it has versus the volume of an actually 40 S&W shell. Besides, do you really want to monkey with small primer vs. large primer when you can buy once fired for so little money? You could probably sell the 10 mm if you have enough to offset a lot of the cost.

If you have a speer reloading manual, read their section on 357 sig. Same applies to 40 S&W from 10mm.

Now, I have no experience with the 10mm. But it seems to me that if the 10mm has a beefier base and someone did have the skills to create a custom round to chamber in 40 S&W, he might have a round that wouldn't bulge so bad in an unsupported chamber. A rube-goldberg solution to a non-issue? Quite possibly.
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