September 13, 2019, 05:36 PM | #1 |
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Case length for 45 colt
Started shooting my pieta 71/2 . Seems to me some of my cases will need to be trimmed. Right now they have been fired 3x and reloaded. Is this typical for the 45 colt ? Winchester & starline brass.
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September 13, 2019, 05:40 PM | #2 |
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Have they perceptively stretched?
If so, how much/what length now? . Last edited by mehavey; September 13, 2019 at 08:59 PM. |
September 13, 2019, 06:37 PM | #3 |
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I have never had to trim a straight wall handgun case.
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September 13, 2019, 07:49 PM | #4 | |
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September 14, 2019, 01:09 AM | #5 |
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I shoot CAS. Have reloaded some 45 Colt cases at least 10 times, maybe even more, before they get brittle and I start seeing case mouth cracks. I have never, ever trimmed or felt the need to.
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September 14, 2019, 08:52 AM | #6 |
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Agree on not trimming straight walled pistol cases. The question is, why do you think they need trimmed? If you're having trouble with bullets rotating in the cylinder, you're not seating them deep enough or you don't have any crimp and they're moving on recoil.
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September 14, 2019, 09:15 AM | #7 |
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Thanks one and all for your replies.
max trim length for 45 colt is 1.285 in. when i re-sized in my lee die....
starting lengths are measured before they are run thu the die and finish lengths are measured. there is definite stretching of the case on the average of 0.010 to 0.015 inches so if i start with a case that is 1.265 and end up with 1.280, next time i might have to trim. And i am even lubing the cases, even though not necessary to do so. Are you saying that because the cartridge seats on the rim and not the neck it does not required case trimming?? |
September 14, 2019, 11:47 AM | #8 |
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I have been reloading revolver ammo since 1969. I may have measured some cases in the beginning, prolly out of curiosity, but have never needed to trim any. I started with cast led bullets that had a crimp groove and seated the bullet to the crimp groove (and the cannalure on jacketed bullets) and disregarded book OAL. Never had a problem...
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September 14, 2019, 12:00 PM | #9 |
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[QUOTEAre you saying that because the cartridge seats on the rim and not the neck it does not required case trimming?? ][/QUOTE]
I think everyone's telling you that they get longer after going through the size die and get shorter after firing them and they stretch to meet the cylinder wall. It's a cycle. Sizing makes them longer and shooting makes them shorter. Over time they don't stretch enough to require trimming. I've been loading straight walled cases for fifty years and have a lot o them that have been reloaded many, many times. They don't need to be trimmed. |
September 14, 2019, 12:30 PM | #10 | |
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A clinger and deplorable, MAGA, and life NRA member. When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns. Single Action .45 Colt (Sometimes colloquially referred to by its alias as the .45 'Long' Colt or .45LC). Don't leave home without it. That said, the .44Spec is right up their too... but the .45 Colt is still the king. Last edited by rclark; September 14, 2019 at 02:37 PM. |
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September 14, 2019, 01:45 PM | #11 |
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Max case lengths will be given in your manual. As will the trim-to even though it's highly unlikely you'll ever need to trim any hand gun case. And 3 times loading is really not that many. A handgun case is very, very unlikely to stretch at all. Never mind 20 thou in three loads.
Anyway, SAAMI Max is 1.285"(not "max trim length") with 1.265" being minimum. Quickest way to check case length is to set your vernier at the Max and use it as a case gauge.
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September 14, 2019, 04:54 PM | #12 |
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I trimmed a bag of .357s so as to get a uniform roll crimp.
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September 15, 2019, 09:43 AM | #13 |
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I always trim mine the first time to get everything the same length and consistant. Sometimes theres a huge difference in lengths.
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September 15, 2019, 10:42 AM | #14 | |
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September 15, 2019, 01:11 PM | #15 |
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Senecahornet,
The reason high power rifle cartridges need trimming is their peak pressure is high enough to stick the brass body to the chamber while the head is pushed back to the breech face, stretching the brass at the pressure ring where it transitions from thin to thick near the head. One reason this happens is the speed and magnitude with which the pressure builds and the other is that a bottleneck rifle case has the shoulder pushed against the chamber, helping to resist having the whole case move back before the pressure reaches the sticking point. Straight wall cases don't have that, so they need higher pressure to stick to the chamber to stretch than bottleneck cases do. The transition pressure, where sticking begins for bottleneck cases is usually around 30,000 psi peak. For straight-wall cases, it is often closer to 40,000 psi. Your 45 Colt is not at high enough pressure to grow brass. In a case that has stretched where the pressure ring winds up, the increase in length occurs during resizing as the body is extruded narrower, pushing the brass at the front of the case forward. In a case that has not stretched at the pressure ring location, the whole case has backed up to the breech of the chamber, bringing the mouth with it. When that occurs, the whole case expands outward to seal the chamber against rearward gas leaks, and the brass to provide that extra width is acquired the opposite way from how the sizing die squeezes a case longer; it is done by pulling the case shorter. So, when you measure a fired low-pressure case from a chamber that had any wiggle room when you chambered the cartridge, it will be shorter than it was when you loaded it. When you resize it, the sizing process is merely putting the brass back in place...assuming it can. I once ran some bulk-purchased 45 Auto brass through 50 light target shooting reload cycles. Just under 1/3 were left by then, the rest having split or been inadvertently sacrificed to the range gods. After resizing straight-sided with a Dillon carbide ring sizing die, they were all about 0.025" shorter than they had been when they were new. The combination of low pressure and a slightly tapered chamber to fill had expanded the brass enough that resizing would move a little of the wall brass permanently to the rear at each resizing, taking about half a thousandth off their length each time. Your 45 Colt may or may not shorten like that. Your chamber walls are straighter than the 45 Auto has, so unless they are on the wide side, I would expect to see less of that. Because resizing extrudes the case longer, to monitor the effect you must always measure the cases at the same point in the load cycle to detect a permanent change. Always measure right after resizing to detect a change that might affect your crimp dies setting. Compare the last as-resized measurement to the current as-resized measurement to learn of a permanent change. You could also compare as-fired brass from one load cycle to as-refired brass from the next load cycle, but that won't tell you if you need to adjust your crimping.
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September 17, 2019, 07:57 AM | #16 |
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I too trim one time to get more consistent crimps. I also segregate brands that are shorter than the nominal I need for my crimp setting. I don't size new brass, so it gets loaded and fired once before sizing and measuring, possibly trimmed. The trick is deciding on a nominal and what is a tolerable range, because a few thousandths +- is not important. The sensible nominal is a number that avoids trimming once-fired brass.
My S&W 19-4 will not chamber full length .357, so I have a special trim length for it, .010 shorter nominal (1.265). I suppose ammo would shoot okay without all that, but my reloading is a craft that I like to do with some precision, short of being obsessive about it.
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September 17, 2019, 08:38 AM | #17 |
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The only revolver brass I've ever trimmed was a batch of new .44 brass that was too long.
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September 20, 2019, 12:22 AM | #18 | |
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This:
Quote:
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September 21, 2019, 04:01 PM | #19 |
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Good stuff on the thread. Thanks for getting this one going OP..
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September 22, 2019, 11:06 AM | #20 |
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New brass can easily be tested in a sampling for how or if it will accept a bullet without sizing the brass. In my case I have several revolver calibers for which the only new brass I ever bought was Starline and one cartridge in Winchester, which generally load the same for me with a little variation in head thickness and then fit on a specific brand/thickness of shell holder. Not true for all of their cartridges, but I learned to watch out for Remington (R.P.) as having thin case walls and then not sizing down as tight an inside diameter as other brands. Bullets could even be pushed in or drop in freely depending on diameter. So the only Remington I use is nickel plated for my cowboy gun belts, and those have sized normally. I use Winchester and Starline and only an occasional batch of Federal.
After all that, my point is that my context for not sizing new brass is Starline, because the way it galls on the expander after sizing is unacceptable, and it works well without sizing. The expander is RCBS Cowboy for lead bullet sizes. The expander for XTPs might be okay, but the sizer in that die set is smaller, potentially producing the same problem of galling. Tricks to prevent galling like car wash baths were not sufficient. But we have plowed this row before.
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September 26, 2019, 02:01 AM | #21 |
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I don't know where the idea came from that new (virgin) brass is all ready to load just as it comes out of the box or bag.
particularly if its packed loose. The people making and selling the brass don't advertise that it is ready to load with no additional prep required, and I'm thinking that if it was, they would be. Sometimes, it may work out, but I've see a lot of brass with some slight damage due to shipping, packed loose, especially large bore thin brass. Dented case mouths or slightly out of round, is fairly common, meaning each batch often has one or to or so. Easy to fix. Also, new brass isn't chamfered, and for some cases, that makes a big difference. seems like 40 some years ago, buying brass was packed just like loaded ammo, Remingtons came in Styrofoam trays, Winchesters came packed alternating up/down in a box. Last couple decades seems like its nearly all loose in a box or a bag... I size everything I load. Basic first step, brand new cases or fired brass, all gets sized, first. I've never had to trim pistol cases due to length resulting from stretching. I have trimmed batches for uniformity. If you're loading upper end loads in cases using a roll crimp, uniform length is the best way to go.
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September 26, 2019, 06:17 AM | #22 |
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"I don't know where the idea came from that new (virgin) brass is all ready to load just as it comes out of the box or bag."
Because it works better than sizing it. Context is revolver and then flared case mouths before roll crimp, so sharp case mouth edges are not an issue. The expander makes cases as uniformly shaped as they need to be. I catch any anomalies by gauging every round. I don't recall any regular issues.
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September 26, 2019, 09:49 AM | #23 |
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I've used a neck turning mandrel in a Sinclair mandrel die body or a Lyman M-die or a Lee Collet Die to take dents out of case necks. Otherwise, I've never resized new brass for a couple of reasons. One is that bulk brass comes from the same bins commercial ammo makers load their finished ammo in. Indeed, up until about 15 years ago, factory-primed bulk brass was commonly available. It's the same brass, but with a primer already in it. Glen Zediker mentioned that he used that for initial loading and I couldn't see why I shouldn't either. If it fits the chamber, it can be loaded and fired.
A second reason is I've noted before that resizing a rimless bottleneck case a second time will make it a little shorter from head to shoulder, thereby increasing excess headspace in the chamber and therefore increasing the amount the case is stretched at the first firing. I have yet to identify any advantage to putting that extra wear in the brass. Mind you, I still inspect and, in some instances, prep and check wall runout in new brass, depending on my purposes for it. The last time I bought Winchester 223 brass in bulk, I found two cases that had missed the flash hole punching operation. I always look at the flash holes.
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September 26, 2019, 01:55 PM | #24 |
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While this thread is about reloading, remember that it is specific to 45 Colt. And so we should keep in mind that it is a caliber that has some special considerations that may not always apply to all other calibers. It has some quirks that the 44 magnum, a nearly identical cartridge, does not have.
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September 26, 2019, 02:30 PM | #25 |
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Pathfinder45: Other than the old "balloon head" case what "special considerations" should I consider?
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