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June 1, 2012, 09:11 AM | #1 |
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Have you ever taken apart a store bought round of ammunition?
If you have ever taken apart a round of store bought ammunition, what was the...
1. Caliber 2. Manufacturer 3. Grain of bullet 4. How many grains of powder were in it (and if possible to discern, what type..ie flake, ball, stick) Just curious if this could be done to replicate a factory round. Thanks
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June 1, 2012, 09:23 AM | #2 |
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Commercial ammo manufacturers use proprietary powder that unavailable to the public so how much is in there is irrelevant and you can't identify powder by looking at it. So it makes no sence to pull a bullet just to look unless of course you just want to.
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June 1, 2012, 09:31 AM | #3 |
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You can pretty much replicate the performance of most factory rounds as long as you know which bullet is being used. As TMD said, you can't just use exactly the same charge of the same lot of powder they used, but you can use a suitable powder to fire the same bullet at the same velocity as the factory round.
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June 1, 2012, 09:31 AM | #4 |
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It's almost impossible to identify a powder visually.
Knowing that it's "ball" or "stick" doesn't tell you a thing. As mentioned by TMD, many factory rounds are loaded with powders or blends of powders that we couldn't buy even if we knew what they were. If you want to duplicate factory ammo, shoot some in your gun over a chrony and then find load data that gives you that velocity. "Velocity chasing", which is blindly trying to reach a speed without consulting known safe data because you managed it with factory ammo is very dangerous. If you want to get even closer to duplicating factory loads, you can do as you say and disassemble a round, weigh the powder and then find load data that matches the speed you get and the powder charge. The problem you'll find there is that charges in factory ammo will vary by a SHOCKING amount. Ultimately, duplicating factory charge weights is pretty pointless. I care about two things in my ammo.... coming close to the cartridges capabilities in terms of velocity and consistent accuracy. Neither matters to me without the other.
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June 1, 2012, 09:49 AM | #5 | |
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Quote:
Thanks, that is one of the things I was very curious about. If the powder varied and to what degree. I made my first rounds of 30-06 a few days ago and made absolutely sure that my test loads all had the exact same charge and wondered how much the accuracy would vary with .1 grain of powder or if it would even be noticeable. I guess I was thinking that "factory ammo" was a standard and a starting point with which to measure my extremely meticulous nature when throwing powder charges.
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June 1, 2012, 09:54 AM | #6 |
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You can duplicate case, primer and projectile, there's no way you can duplicate the powder, as has been pointed out the powder is propriatary usually blended and ran thru a ballistics lab to find the exact blend that produces the velocity and accuracy desired. William.
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June 1, 2012, 09:56 AM | #7 |
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I have that same meticulous nature and I like to believe that it matters.
Unfortunately (or fortunately?), the best shooters in the world have found that, at least "good" loads, are not very sensitive to charge variations. Many of them don't even weigh their charges, but use volumetric measures instead. In fact, one of the better ways to find good loads, The OCW Method by Dan Newberry, results in loads that are not charge weight sensitive, which is one reason why they are consistently accurate.
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June 1, 2012, 10:08 AM | #8 | |
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Quote:
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June 1, 2012, 10:28 AM | #9 | |
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243 Winchester
http://www.imrpowder.com/history.html
Quote:
2. Manufacturer-Remington 3. Grain of bullet-80 4. How many grains of powder were in it (and if possible to discern, what type..ie flake, ball, stick) 42.5 grs Looked like IMR 4350-stick type. Back in the days when Remington, IMR/Dupont were one. |
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June 1, 2012, 10:46 AM | #10 | |
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Quote:
To 243 - Thanks for posting results. Looks good and much appreciated.
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June 1, 2012, 10:54 AM | #11 |
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I have used that method only once, with my Ruger M77 MkII. I know my guns must be weird because I don't see dramatic shifts in groups as charge weight changes, in anything I've ever loaded.
My M77, which is chambered in .204, shot so consistently from bottom to top of the charge range that I didn't even bother to analyze the results. I went to published max and stayed there. However, Uncle Nick (moderator of this forum) is a big proponent of the Newberry method. He is highly experienced and learned in reloading. He says it works, which is enough for me to recommend it to others.
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June 1, 2012, 11:48 AM | #12 |
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In addition, some guns like varying amounts of powder etc. IE have 2 AR15, both with 16 inch (one bull one not) and both 1:9 twist. One likes a particular Varget load that I do and the other doesn't like it at all so I have to drop a full grain for the same target results. Now the one is my target gun and the other is just a plinker so I don't have to do 2 different loads. Difference for 5 shots is 1.5 groups vs 1 at 100 yards so for hunting etc it would not matter but for target it matters a lot.
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June 1, 2012, 11:51 AM | #13 |
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What's the attraction of duplicating mass produced ammo?
Isn't one of the reasons for reloading to make ammo that's better or different than factory? Loads that are more suitable to one's own needs and not everybody else's?
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June 1, 2012, 12:11 PM | #14 | ||
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Quote:
My previous post below: Quote:
To g.willikers - Yes that is true, but as stated above in my previous post, this would be a standard (bar) to measure against to start (as I'm very new to reloading)(Been researching for a year, but made first rounds a few days ago). Additionally, I'm curious as to the info that I asked for in my original post. It's also very interesting to note from Brian that the factory cartridges powder charges vary greatly at times.
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June 1, 2012, 12:16 PM | #15 | |
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Quote:
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June 2, 2012, 06:01 PM | #16 |
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Performance. The proof is in the performance.
Taking apart a factory round will tell you the weight of the bullet, but little about the primer and not much about the powder.
So, you can probably find virtually identical bullets. Might produce a good guess as to the type (magnum or standard) of primer with a few test firings of the primer only. Knowing the type of powder (stick, ball, flake, flattened ball) you could then search for loads of that type of powder with that approximate weight that promise that velocity with those bullets. Then work up safe loads that actually deliver that velocity. You will need a chronograph for this. Then decide for yourself if the recoil, flash and report is approximately equal to the factory loads. Lot of work, that. To what end? Lost Sheep p.s. I included the step of using the same grain type of powder assuming that the factory might be using a commercially available powder, or a close chemical relative. I note that many loaders believe the the powder quickness makes a difference in felt recoil. Last edited by Lost Sheep; June 2, 2012 at 06:08 PM. |
June 3, 2012, 12:41 AM | #17 |
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30/06 experiment
Many years ago, I had a Winchester Model 70 Lightweight carbine in 30/06 that was pretty particular about what it liked to shoot. I had tried a number of highly recommended handloads, and was lucky to get 3 shot groups under 2 inches at 100 yards. I happened to pick up a box of PMC ammo for it with the 150 gr soft point bullets on sale for like $6 (hey, I said it was a long time ago) and was shocked to see a nice 1 inch group off the bench. So I had to know what was in there. Now I agree it is impossible to tell exactly what kind of powder they use, but I figured I could figure out if it was ball or extruded, and also get an educated guess at the burning rate based on the charge weight. It turned out to be loaded with about 49 gr of an extruded powder that looked very similar to IMR-4895. On a whim, I picked up a pound of IMR-4895 and loaded up some cases with 49 grains (after checking multiple loading manuals to make certain it was within acceptable pressure levels, seated some 150 gr Nosler Solid Base bullets and tried them out. They shot better than anything else I had tried up to that point! So, at least in my experience, it is possible to get an idea of something to try by checking out factory ammo. I suppose I could do something similar with the Fiocchi 40 gr V-Max .223 ammo that seems to be so accurate in my 700 SPS Varmint, but I would rather enjoy shooting it! I do have handloads that approach it in accuracy and velocity, so I just flip a coin as to which to use in that rifle.
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June 3, 2012, 01:29 AM | #18 |
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All of the statements above have taken care of my opinion on the matter:
You can't figure it out by disassembling a cartridge. But, for giggles... .22 WMR Winchester "Supreme" 36 gr HP 6.5 gr unidentifiable (super fine) ball powder Interestingly... .22 WMR Winchester "Supreme" 30 gr HP 6.5 gr unidentifiable (super fine) ball powder Same powder charge, but a 20% difference in bullet weight. That powder is highly unpredictable, but seemed to be identical during my experimentation. The (seemingly) same ball powder can be found in the 40 gr (45 gr?) Dynapoint "HP" load, with a 5.6 gr to 6.0 gr powder charge.
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June 3, 2012, 08:14 AM | #19 |
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In a chat with a Federal rep at the High Power Nationals some years ago, we talked about powder. He said Federal uses the same powder that's sold to consumers. But they buy in large quantities and develop loads to their own pressure and velocity specs. So their ammo does not use proprietary powder that's mixed to some custom blend. It's the same that us consumers buy, just a different lot number as each one of us often gets.
He also said all the ammo companies do the same thing; he had worked for others. But powder making plants often mix production lots of the same powder type to get the mix to a performance standard they set. Mixing powder components is not an exact science; there's a small difference between lots sold to both customers and ammo making companies. Most folks don't realize that the many different testing techniques and quality thereof that handloaders use to judge a given powder's performance will end up with a wide range of answers for the exact same set of components and even with the very same rifle. Which is why the smarter ammo companies used expensive test barrels both rifled and chambered to strict chamber specs. Those test barrels are clamped in special barreled actions for pressure, velocity and accuracy tests which give much, much more precise results than us humans do holding a rifle. |
June 3, 2012, 08:40 AM | #20 |
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Certainly all the loads from all the companies aren't blended from different powders but, at least as a marketing gimmick, they often say that handloaders can't duplicate their performance. The 204 Ruger is a good example of that, they said exactly that... the powder was a proprietary blend not available on the open market and therefore handloaders could not duplicate factory velocity.
It's true too, or was for a while. Most people couldn't reach the claimed 4,200 fps with a 32gr bullet. Of course, factory ammo, as it turns out, doesn't make it either.
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June 3, 2012, 09:14 AM | #21 | |
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Brian Pfleuger says:
Quote:
Compare the chamber, bore and groove specs in the following: http://www.saami.org/PubResources/CC...04%20Ruger.pdf to what your .204 Ruger barrel has. Most folks who've done this for other cartridges are quite surprised. I doubt this one will be any different. And if the factory's test barrel was held in a solid mount (Universal Receiver), it's gonna shoot bullet out faster than us humans do holding a rifle against our shoulder. Shoulder fired rifles' recoil subtracts several fps from solid mounted test barrels. Last edited by Bart B.; June 3, 2012 at 09:49 AM. |
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