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Ammo for Reduced Loads - Home Shooting
Here we are.
In the SHTF thread I posted a few pictures taken after shooting with a new “toy”.
I bought a pack of 6 .38 Special shells for shooting at home during this frigging lock-down.
I was a bit scheptical, but actually only heard good opinions about these products.
They are made for 9x21 and .38 Special/.357 M. And now also for .223 Rem. No idea if they’re ok yet, but I’ve seen that there are the first few reviews on the net.
The manufacturer suggests to use Large Rifle Magnum primers for the handgun calibers.
I’ve seen the video of an Italian
U-tuber and it seems that with those primers the bullets land at POA at 10 metres. .38 that is.
I used Large Pistol primers, not even magnums, and my bullets landed, at 10 metres, 6 inches lower than my normal wad cutters at 15 metres.
I adjusted my POA and the group was phenomenal. I normally use the 6 ‘o clock hold, but that threw me off the box with the target. Aiming at the red dot at 12 ‘o clock made the trick.
The noise is nothing, just a small bang. No ear protection needed. It just stinks a bit, but to me that is perfume;-D
Backstop.
With LP primers, my bullets go through two complete cardboard boxes (the big brown ones for a table-kit) and a lighter one (the black one with the target on it). Perfect holes, through and through. But no signs on the wall.
I put three or four newspapers in the small box and so I could catch all the bullets in the small box already. The bullets chow up the papers, but get stuck.
With LRM primers, the result could be quite different. The energy is over 23 joule, so pretty substantial.
Loading is simple. Just a hand-priming tool or a rubber mallet, and then pressing the bullet with the thumb in its place.
Depriming can be done with the proprietary tool, if you buy the kit including it, or with a simple punch, as I did.
Goes fast enough and is very easy.
The kids had a lot of fun.
The bullet shown in the picture has 4 or 5 “rounds” already on her shoulders, so, if you don’t shoot walls or hard surfaces, they last a lot.
I was thinking about buying the 9 mm brass. The bullets are the same.
I want to train a bit for dynamic shooting, and need to regain my ability at draing and shooting quickly.
The thing is called Aravon’s Blu.
It is made by an Italian Company.
Sorry for the turned pictures. I don’t know why that happens sometimes...
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34a cp., btg. Susa, 3° rgt. Alpini
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12-27-2020 04:49 PM
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Very interesting. I could possibly set up a range in the basement for these. Not sure I can get them in the US however. Checked a website I can fudge through a bit but as I don't speak Italian
, unsure of most of it.
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Legacy Member
I have been doing something similar with full bore ammunition using the French
method of making gallery ammunition, using flash paper for propellent and a lead ball projectile.. I have managed to source proper flash paper from a Magic Supplies company and cut them into 1/2" x 1 1/2 " rectangles, folded into a W and put in the case. The projectiles are simply lead balls of the appropriate diameter (basically bore diameter plus a few thou) coated with liquid Alox. I am using .312 for .303 and 7.62x54 and .324 for 7.92x54, 7.92 Kurtz and 8x50 Lebel. You just need to press the ball into the mouth of the case with thumb pressure.. no need for a press. I believe buckshot will work with .308, but you need to check..
They are perfectly usable on a .22RF range and are extremely accurate. There is no danger of detonation, over charging or use of wads etc.. The bore is a bit mucky afterwards, but this is mostly from the Alox..
The method works well for rifle calibres up to about 8mm.. above this there is a tendency for the ball to stick in the bore.
Last edited by bombdoc; 12-27-2020 at 05:10 PM.
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French 8 mm Lebel 15 meter reduced loading
The French
manufactured a round lead ball or spherical ball for reduced loading at 15 meters called the Mle 1895 2nd type. The round lead ball loaded 8Attachment 113590Attachment 113591Attachment 113592 mm Lebel in my photos is headstamped 3 - 18
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Advisory Panel
I used a method involving a primed 38 Spl case and a plate of half inch thick wax. Use the empty case like a cookie cutter and the bullets are flush with the case mouth. They fly fine for eight yds, the distance across my basement in one of my married quarters. There was no real buildup of wax. The targets are paper and hung suspended from a wire, towel behind them. Just use a box for the catch. Yes, the primers back out.
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Originally Posted by
RCS
There is also such ammo for the Carcanos. Now it is collector's stuff...
For the loads I'm using, I found that amazon.it, Mcallister.it and probably also Brownells.it have them.
Maybe ebay could be helpful too.
---------- Post added at 08:56 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:56 AM ----------
I used a method involving a primed 38 Spl case and a plate of half inch thick wax. Use the empty case like a cookie cutter and the bullets are flush with the case mouth. They fly fine for eight yds, the distance across my basement in one of my married quarters. There was no real buildup of wax. The targets are paper and hung suspended from a wire, towel behind them. Just use a box for the catch. Yes, the primers back out.
Just the normal Small Pistol primers?
34a cp., btg. Susa, 3° rgt. Alpini
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Ovidio
normal Small Pistol primers
That's all I used, here have a read about it... American Rifleman | How to Make and Reload Wax Bullets
Matter of fact, I shot a tin beer can and it about tore the bottom off.
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I'll take a look at that too.
Would be fun to have also some "wax cutters"...
34a cp., btg. Susa, 3° rgt. Alpini
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Made some of those wax wad cutters myself. I did bore out the case to take 209 shotgun primers. That sent them.
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I vaguely recall that Speer? once made dedicated PLASTIC, reloadable 38 Spl "ammo". Separate plastic (polycarbonate??) case and bullet. These were around in the 1960's and '70's.
Primer ONLY propulsion, good for 8 - 10 yards. Not too noisy. Just run the extractor fan to remove the lead fumes, although, these days, you MIGHT be able to find 'lead-free" NT small Pistol primers as loaded by several ammo makers. NT primers have a different "flash" which is why the cases have flash holes that are larger than normal,
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