FAQ: How to Find Load Data for Your Bullets
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- Опубліковано 22 чер 2020
- How to Find Load Data for Your Berry's Bullets
Great products available at berrysmfg.com
For cartridge dimensions go to saami.org
Load data shown at www.hodgdonreloading.com/
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The lee load manual is great for all of berrys bullets
I mostly Berry's CP bullets to load 38 special and 357 magnum for plinking with my 6" barrel revolver and my 18 and 1/2 " barrel carbine. They do a great job and keep the costs reasonable.
I love you guys! Love the 115gr & 124gr spb's
Get this guy knows a lot about CP.
I've had really good luck using Lyman Cast Bullet Data with Berry's Bullets
Make sure you check them with a chronograph. I loaded a thousand rounds following the website to the letter. Something must have been off with the powder since my loads were 70-100 fps faster. I noticed because at close range my paper targets have jacket separation holes.
100 fps could be barrel length. I loaded the Berry's bullets for .357 mag and got 150 fps+ difference between my S&W M-13 , 3" and my 586 8" . And if you're getting "plating" separation your crimp is too tight ... start backing your crimping die off about a half turn at a time until your bullets stay together. My loads are now shooting beautiful round holes from 10 to 50 yrds.
I loaded a bunch of .45s a little too hot because I neglected to zero my scale before I started. I notice that this important bit of information isn't in any of the reloading manuals that I have, but having used scales at work, it was the first thing I did every day.
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@@jwash3rd common sense says to zero your scale before use
I bought Berry’s 100gr HHP in .380acp. Where in the world can I find load data for Accurate #2 and this bullet?
i use cam pro bullets and can load them right up to max velocities on any jacketed bullet
I love his smile and body laughing when he sad we are ready to go !!!!
Am I the only one who noticed the website and package have a 600fps difference?
I know this is an old post. But I was told the reason I am finding it difficult to find 458 SOCOM in manuals. Is because no info for SAAMI data. Could that be true?
In the video, the website velocity recommendation is 1,850fps, but on the side of the box in the next shot, of the same bullets have the recommendation at 1250.
What gives, Berry's?
This needs to be addressed by Berry’s!
Why not come up with a compilation of data you'd recommend linked on your website?
@@jeffallen3382 exactly the .44 mag I load specifically for my Ruger Redhawk could crack the frame on my S&W 29-2
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I thought the capacity of the case was the limiting factor. If i can get the bullet deep enough how can it be to hot a load? j/k
OMG are you serious ?
@@Rancherinaz j/k = just kidding
What a useless bit of "advice." Justin completely ignores the fact that different bullets of the same weight have different bullet lengths, so loading them to the same C.O.L. will result in different velocities and (much more importantly) different pressures.
Berry's had good bullets, when they were selling bullets. Their idiotic ways of trying to provide "load data" without providing any actual load data are simply pathetic.
I hear these blow apart in rifle rounds over a certain fps. Please tell me this isn't true because that is the only thing stopping me from buying them
This video is the source of much confusion. The first pic shows 44 mag hp bullets, with a max velocity of 1850 fps, and then in the next pic you show 44 cal at 1250 fps! As a new reloader, this really screwed me up!
The big question is, are these videos for experienced reloaders, who don’t need this very basic info, or the new guy who’s already confused by all the contradictory info out there???
As a very popular bullet producer, be better.
Many replies here, suggest that they should not reload. Sheesh
Seriously? "This load might be good because of the similarities in bullets." Except that the ONLY similarity is weight. That bullet is jacketed; yours is plated. It's almost guaranteed that the bullet lengths are different. Every reloader knows that lead bullets, jacketed bullets, and plated bullets perform differently in the same barrel, so claiming that you can use any data for a lead or jacketed bullet is not only misleading, it's downright irresponsible.
This video is going to get some reloader in trouble. You should never have made it, and you should remove it from the Internet.
Chill out Bill
They may not be identical, but they are certainly close enough to use for a reloading guide. Quit being such a snowflake.