NB to mods: This might need to move to the "reloading" sub forum, but I thought it might be of more general interest here, as it is becoming something of a lost art.
So, a while back my curiosity was piqued on the subject of fireforming .303 brass into .410 shotshells. It has to do with my milsurp "issues". A great many Enfields were converted into .410 muskets in India for use by prison guards, and I had always wondered "why .410" ??
It turns out the reasons were economics. .303 brass, it would seem, was quite easy to convert into .410 brass. The case head is the right dimensions, the brass is the right length. It was really a matter of blowing the taper out of the .303 brass into the straight tube of a .410. For a country with perpetual "budgetary issues" this was an economical way of arming prison guards with some firepower that at the same time would be of little use to criminals.
Anyway, what pushed me over the edge is the cost of commercial .410 shells. At $0.75 to $1.00 a shell most places, this makes for a pricey cartridge that I mostly use for popping gophers close in - I've taken to bringing a short .410 single shot with me when varminting, because it's hard to put glass on a gopher within 10 yards.
So I took it on as a project last summer, and decided I might as well film what I was doing as I went along. The end result is I now have a nice supply set aside of 2&3/4" full brass .410 shells, that should be reloadable almost indefinitely, and I can reload them at half the cost of 12 gauge target loads. Given the current cost of good quality .22 ammo, this means that .410 now costs me not much more than .22 per shot.
Sorry if the videos are a bit long. I was making it up as I went along, over multiple filming sessions. I managed to cut it down to 2 x 25(ish) minute videos, from over 3 hours of source video. Which is why, even though I finished filming all this in August last year, just the though of getting around to editing out all the crap took until the past couple weeks.
Part 1:
Part 2:
So, a while back my curiosity was piqued on the subject of fireforming .303 brass into .410 shotshells. It has to do with my milsurp "issues". A great many Enfields were converted into .410 muskets in India for use by prison guards, and I had always wondered "why .410" ??
It turns out the reasons were economics. .303 brass, it would seem, was quite easy to convert into .410 brass. The case head is the right dimensions, the brass is the right length. It was really a matter of blowing the taper out of the .303 brass into the straight tube of a .410. For a country with perpetual "budgetary issues" this was an economical way of arming prison guards with some firepower that at the same time would be of little use to criminals.
Anyway, what pushed me over the edge is the cost of commercial .410 shells. At $0.75 to $1.00 a shell most places, this makes for a pricey cartridge that I mostly use for popping gophers close in - I've taken to bringing a short .410 single shot with me when varminting, because it's hard to put glass on a gopher within 10 yards.
So I took it on as a project last summer, and decided I might as well film what I was doing as I went along. The end result is I now have a nice supply set aside of 2&3/4" full brass .410 shells, that should be reloadable almost indefinitely, and I can reload them at half the cost of 12 gauge target loads. Given the current cost of good quality .22 ammo, this means that .410 now costs me not much more than .22 per shot.
Sorry if the videos are a bit long. I was making it up as I went along, over multiple filming sessions. I managed to cut it down to 2 x 25(ish) minute videos, from over 3 hours of source video. Which is why, even though I finished filming all this in August last year, just the though of getting around to editing out all the crap took until the past couple weeks.
Part 1:
Part 2:


















































