No room for all the powder, and if there is then your case is shorter so it will be higher pressure. You can load 38 spl into 357 cases though.
part of this will depend on the gun you're using. If you've got one of the few ruger redhawks that were chambered in .357, you have a bit more leeway than if you are using a 'k' frame s&w.
What does your reloading book tell you?
You are going to load .357 Magnum loads into a shorter case and expect what??
You can shoot .38 Special in a .357 Magnum revolver , but the chance of an oops moment is
just that ...an oops moment.
+P in .38 might be as hot as you can go.
Just my .38 worth this morning.
Rob
Your response was not appreciated.
What does your reloading book tell you?
You are going to load .357 Magnum loads into a shorter case and expect what??
You can shoot .38 Special in a .357 Magnum revolver , but the chance of an oops moment is
just that ...an oops moment.
+P in .38 might be as hot as you can go.
Just my .38 worth this morning.
Rob
Your response was not appreciated.
I've loaded 38 Special cases with 357 Mag loads (not top end though) without peeing my pants.I don't know if 38 brass is inherently weaker, but if the cartridge overall length is the same, the internal volume of the 38/357 loads would be the same, and the cartridge would be none the wiser. The only thing you'd have to be careful about, is making sure they don't find their way into a 38 Special only revolver.



























