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Speedloader questions.


steel1212

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I've seen your reloads... but I don't know how the rounds don't wobble enough to cause you grief!

The only thing that holds the rounds in the loader is the rim of the brass and the star of the reloader. If the rounds are wobbling, something is wrong. The main reason for the factory depth of the loader is so you can load them without using a loading block.

I filled the hole with JB weld I think. If you don't fill the hole then the loader can catch on the pin in the center of the cylinder and won't fall away.

Should this thread be a sticky? ;)

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I've seen your reloads... but I don't know how the rounds don't wobble enough to cause you grief!

The only thing that holds the rounds in the loader is the rim of the brass and the star of the reloader. If the rounds are wobbling, something is wrong. The main reason for the factory depth of the loader is so you can load them without using a loading block.

I filled the hole with JB weld I think. If you don't fill the hole then the loader can catch on the pin in the center of the cylinder and won't fall away.

Should this thread be a sticky? ;)

Mine aren't wobbly but I understand what you are saying. Before I cut mine I tried a friend's that were cut a little more aggressive than mine are now. I seemed to manage to have problems with them getting misaligned during my reloads and have a couple "not go in". Maybe it was my errors. I may try to cut some more aggressively. Mine don't get hung up now but maybe they will be better.

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Hope it's not too much of a thread drift, but do you guys chamfer the cylinder holes on your speedloader guns? I have on my moonclipped 625 and it works great. Just wondering about the SSR/Classic guns. I have the occasional hang up trying to charge the cylinder. Can't seem to see whats hanging up other than maybe a case on the cylinder edge.

Thanks

Kevin

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Hope it's not too much of a thread drift, but do you guys chamfer the cylinder holes on your speedloader guns? I have on my moonclipped 625 and it works great. Just wondering about the SSR/Classic guns. I have the occasional hang up trying to charge the cylinder. Can't seem to see whats hanging up other than maybe a case on the cylinder edge.

Thanks

Kevin

Honestly... I can't imagine doing reloads without chamfered chambers!! Really. I had my first 686 done and it was lightly done but it seemed to be fine for reloading. Then I got a back up and without chamfering the reloading was a joke! PITA and very slow. I got the chamfering tools from Brownells and did my new gun and touched up my original one a bit. Came out great! I didn't smooth the cuts(round edges) but they still work pretty good IMO. I didn't go crazy deep with the chamfers either.

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  • 1 month later...

For the filling the hole in the comp III mod. What are you guys using? I was thinking of using some thread all and running it until it bottoms out after taping it then using thread locker to lock it down. Would there be any problem with bottoming out the thread all in the hole or is there something that needs to move in there?

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For the filling the hole in the comp III mod. What are you guys using? I was thinking of using some thread all and running it until it bottoms out after taping it then using thread locker to lock it down. Would there be any problem with bottoming out the thread all in the hole or is there something that needs to move in there?

Since I like simple, I went to lowe's and got a long 1/4 X 20 nylon screw and jamed it down the hole and sliced it off flush with a razor blade, done. :cheers:

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For the filling the hole in the comp III mod. What are you guys using? I was thinking of using some thread all and running it until it bottoms out after taping it then using thread locker to lock it down. Would there be any problem with bottoming out the thread all in the hole or is there something that needs to move in there?

Steel1212, Just mix up some epoxy and dobb the epoxy with the part until it fills the hole. More simple just have to make sure none of it sticks to the sides. And for that you can just wipe it off before it dries. I found that easier that getting a bolt the right size. :cheers: Later rdd

Edited to correct my spelling

Edited by Bubber
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I wanted to make sure it wouldn't get pushed in from repeated use

With the nylon screw, I just pushed it in until it bottomed out and sliced it off. No danger of it getting pushed in since it's all the way in to start.

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I wanted to make sure it wouldn't get pushed in from repeated use

With the nylon screw, I just pushed it in until it bottomed out and sliced it off. No danger of it getting pushed in since it's all the way in to start.

well yeah, that was my thinking but with the thread all its well threaded, not that it matters it just has to keep from coming out the front not the back. Same plan though :cheers:

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First outting shooting SSR. My SSR only has a FO front and Weigand rear sight other than that its stock. I "Bubberized" my speedloaders down flush with the center star. I might go farther on my next ones though. Here is the video. I'm particularly proud of the reloads on the last 2 stages. I was 2nd overall on those 2 stages behind the Want2Race who had the lowest time on both and I was less than a second on the 5th stage in the video and 2.5 on the last one :D

Edited by steel1212
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I was thinking about trimming the top part of the grip, the part that points up directly above the medallion, so that when I eject the empties they will fall free instead of getting hung up there. Anybody done this? Any reason not to?

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Those last two stages reloads were quite fast. Nice.

Is your cylinder chamferred? Curious what you think of it.

I was thinking about trimming the top part of the grip, the part that points up directly above the medallion, so that when I eject the empties they will fall free instead of getting hung up there. Anybody done this? Any reason not to?

Mine get hung up there frequently. I noticed you doing the shake because of it. Personally I'd have a hard time cuting my grips to alleviate that, just doesn't sit right - purely from a preference thing, I have no real good reason not to. I am getting some wooden grips; I'm wondering if they'll unload differently from my factory synthetic grips.

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I was thinking about trimming the top part of the grip, the part that points up directly above the medallion, so that when I eject the empties they will fall free instead of getting hung up there. Anybody done this? Any reason not to?

Cutting the "ears" on the grip can help if brass is catching and staying there in the way. Some of my revos are cut that way others don't seem to be a problem. I spoke with No343 on such an item. He reloads with his left hand a simple cant towards the cylinde will let the brass fall away. You are using the different method and canting the revo may be problematic as you would have to cant the revo to the right to allow the brass to fall and may cause a problem with the 180 rule. Later rdd

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Steel1212-

You are tossing the speedloader off to the right side after each reload. Once the shells have been released, just let go and let it fall between your hands. Could buy you an easy second or so per reload.

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Steel1212-

You are tossing the speedloader off to the right side after each reload. Once the shells have been released, just let go and let it fall between your hands. Could buy you an easy second or so per reload.

Yeah, I said that to myself every time I did it <_<

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I was thinking about trimming the top part of the grip, the part that points up directly above the medallion, so that when I eject the empties they will fall free instead of getting hung up there. Anybody done this? Any reason not to?

Good vid, thanks.

Honestly, though, I'm not convinced your brass hanging up is due to your grips. Check out the pics below. As soon as you open the cylinder, the gun leaves the top red line and goes down with your strong hand to speedloader level(bottom red line). AS a result, your gun isn't vertical for very long, and worse, you're starting to flip the gun muzzle-down before the brass had a chance to clear the gun.

IDPAreload.jpg

Instead, keep the gun up (top red line below) and eject while your strong hand goes for the speedloader. Keep the gun vertical as you lower it to speedloader level and the gun is near-vertical (notice the muzzle is slightly forward of the 180) for longer, so the brass has longer to fall free.

Also, if you don't already, practice your reloads with empty brass in the gun. Preferable dirty, not-resized. Without empty brass as part of your reload practice, your thumb can easily adopt a weak ejection stroke (ask me how I know <_< )

SpeedloaderReloadTB.jpg

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