Agreed, I just said, I've never heard of it. It's a pretty specialized round.
Just like most gun shops don't carry .257 ackley improved. I've never seen it, but it might be out there.
OP, STOP, STOP, STOP,
you're in over your head. Nobody reverse engineers a factory load, and I've never heard of a gun shop selling 9mm major.
Reloading is fun, but you have to walk before you run.
I'm not a gunsmith by any stretch of the imagination. But I had my gun worked on by one. I bought a trigger pull gauge just for fun.
Mine always comes in at 5.75 +/-. But it's only reliable with fully seated Federal Small Pistol Primers. It won't fire anything else.
.
I was up in Las Vegas at the SCI convention (Safari Club International) yesterday, and Nighthawk had a display. Mostly high priced 1911s, but they had a few Korth Revolvers as well.
The guy working the booth asked if I'd like to see one, and I jumped at the chance. Who wouldn't want to handle a five grand revo?
Imagine my disappointment when I was wholly unimpressed.
The sales rep went on and on about how smooth the trigger was. Yeah, all eight or nine pounds of it. Next up was the push button cylinder release.
Like that wouldn't fall out half way thru a stage ?
I'm comparing these $5000 Korths to my $1000 Kirbisized 627. You know the one with a 5.5lb trigger pull and the cylinder that stays in place?
Anybody actually own or shoot one of these? What are your thoughts?
Beats me, that's what Jim Scoutten from Shooting USA tv told me.
Of course that was right after I had contacted ICORE on their Facebook page, and emailed Gorka.
I wrote for Sporting Clays Magazine for a while, so I know a little bit about how this works.
http://www.ysr-racer.com/sporting_clays/dlcc.htm