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45 ACP in revolver reload help


Spray_N_Prey

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Ok I was at a match today and during a reload somehow I saw a bullet that came out of the brass and was in the cylinder not allowing the following moonclip to seat. I thought I was crimping enough, could this have just been a fluck (spelling?) ???

What do you guys crimp to on revolver rounds?

thank god the cylinder won't close with a 230grain bullet in there, I think the outcome if two bullets where in the cylinder would be bad.

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Ok I was at a match today and during a reload somehow I saw a bullet that came out of the brass and was in the cylinder not allowing the following moonclip to seat. I thought I was crimping enough, could this have just been a fluck (spelling?) ???

What do you guys crimp to on revolver rounds?

thank god the cylinder won't close with a 230grain bullet in there, I think the outcome if two bullets where in the cylinder would be bad.

I use a Redding Taper Crimp die. It is set tight enough to keep the bullets from walking out of the brass when firing the revolver.

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Taper crimp and then add another 1/4 turn when you think you have enough. When we shot pins at Second Chance where 255gr bullets were the norm with very heavy loads. They would quickly walk without adequate crimp. I have used Dillon die sets for years w/o problem but haved used CH & RCBS TC dies with success.

Edited by jmax
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What type bullet?

Last match I found one of my loaded but ejected rounds had pulled quite a bit. I was surprised, it was a first for me. (at least with something with so little recoil as a 45Acp.)

Edited by cas
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Common problem, and yet another reason to use plenty of crimp (a roll crimp is best, but a good tight taper crimp is fine, too) on revolver ammo.

In my opinion, most shooters don't crimp their revolver ammo enough.

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A .45 load with a lead round nose should measure .472 with no crimp on a finished round with a bullet that mikes at .452. For autos I make the crimp .001 or a measurement of .471. With my 625 I've found I need a crimp of .004 or a measurement of .468.

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I had a situation with TZZ Match brass. When I loaded this brass with my normal crimp the bullet pushed deaper in the case! Reset the die and redid all the TZZ. New setting doesn't seem to hurt other loads any.

FWIW

Richard

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Common problem, and yet another reason to use plenty of crimp (a roll crimp is best, but a good tight taper crimp is fine, too) on revolver ammo.

In my opinion, most shooters don't crimp their revolver ammo enough.

So do they sell a roll crimp for 45 acp? also since I load for auto's also, Should I avoid a roll crimp for automatics? I have never had a problem before, but I will crimp a bit more.

thanks to all for the help.

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Too much taper crimp can be as bad as too little. You squish the case mouth diameter down too much in the taper crimp die and the brass rebounds some but the lead doesn't. You're not gripping the bullet anymore. For .45acp it seems (depending on the brass's wall thickness) a crimped case mouth diameter of .468"-.470" is about right. I was having the bullet creep issue and backing off the crimp fixed it. I tried more crimp first and they crept more. Get out the inertial bullet puller and pull a bullet and see how much you're squishing it. A roll crimp with plated or coated bullets and no cannelure gets you into issues with cutting the plating/coating.

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  • 1 month later...

I use a Redding profile crimp for .45 Auto Rim, not ACP. The AR PC is a roll crimp and it also puts a slight taper on the round and I have found it to increase the consistency of my loads.

Neal in AZ

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