Reloading rimfire is best left as a theoretical exercise, along with reloading primers. Both can be done,and may be worth doing to say you have done, but there are a bunch of better ways to spend your time, with better returns.
Like, for instance, picking up pop bottles on the roadside, to make enough money to buy the stuff.
Cheers
Trev
there may come a day when reloading primers and making powder is needed
I have a Swiss Vetterli rifle in .41 Swiss rimfire. All numbers match, so trashing/altering the bolt to do the CF conversion is not up for debate. Even if I do scrounge for pop bottles, the very few original rounds I could buy would likely not fire at this age. I have two in my cartridge collection, and havent tried firing them.
if get some brass turned in a lathe just a tube solid head and then make two cutout's one drilled out for a .22 acorn blank and one cut deep enough to let the firing pin hit anneal the tube form it in dies
I got to stop giving out my ideas lol
I have a Swiss Vetterli rifle in .41 Swiss rimfire. All numbers match, so trashing/altering the bolt to do the CF conversion is not up for debate. Even if I do scrounge for pop bottles, the very few original rounds I could buy would likely not fire at this age. I have two in my cartridge collection, and havent tried firing them.
there may come a day when reloading primers and making powder is needed
What? You thought that was an original idea?
Really?
Been done.
Cheers
Trev
I figured on swaging down 32 smith n wesson brass and drilling for 27 ramset. It looks like the best candidate for brass.
Please stop me now if you have a better idea.
Yes the short colt would be nice to have however it seems no one has any for sale that I can find in canada. Thats why I was figuring on making some.
No, not so much, actually. As per above, the .32 colt cases are the same dimensions as the rimfire, but with a better build for adapting.
Cheers
Trev
And who manufactures 32 long (or short) colt ammunition? Alternatively, who manufactures 32 long colt brass? As far as I have found, nobody has for decades, so it isn't exactly "common" either. So - if the OP has 32 rimfire cases, why should he go on a quest to find rare 32 long colt brass?
And while the 32 colt brass is stouter, it doesn't actually matter. The 32 rimfire cases are more than adequate for the low pressure they were designed for (and need to be reloaded to as well). Just from what I gather, anyway...
Best Regards, Gerald
Anyone have any better insight on this??? Is used brass caught under ITAR??
Wait, I just found this - it DOES appear to be considered a munition:
22 CFR Ch. 1, Category III, (f)(1)
http://pmddtc.state.gov/regulations_laws/documents/official_itar/ITAR_Part_121.pdf
So, I guess no used brass from America...
Best Regards, Gerald
And who manufactures 32 long (or short) colt ammunition? Alternatively, who manufactures 32 long colt brass? As far as I have found, nobody has for decades, so it isn't exactly "common" either. So - if the OP has 32 rimfire cases, why should he go on a quest to find rare 32 long colt brass?
And while the 32 colt brass is stouter, it doesn't actually matter. The 32 rimfire cases are more than adequate for the low pressure they were designed for (and need to be reloaded to as well). Just from what I gather, anyway...
Best Regards, Gerald
It's pretty much about the construction of the case, with regards to withstanding being drilled and formed or machined to fit a blank of one sort or another to use as a primer.
Rimfire case construction simply does not allow you the meat to support the rest of the cutting and drilling that is required.
That is the issue with that. Dig around the web for cross section photos of the old rimfire cartridges and compare them to a modern deep-drawn centerfire case. The centerfire case has a great deal more meat at the back end, allowing the support needed to withstand, among other things, removing enough material to get a blank or power nailer load to sit flush.
Now, rimfire cases CAN be reloaded, if, among other things, you are desperate enough to want to play around with various concoctions of red phosphorous, usually sourced from strike anywhere match heads.
You need to punch out the dent from the firing pin as best you can, remove the burnt priming compound, as best you can, install the new priming compound as best you can, them carry on reloading. The bullets are generally a heeled bullet, so molds are not exactly everywhere or inexpensive, and the priming compound from match heads contains a great deal of stuff that makes folks that buy ammo whinge and snivel, aka it's corrosive and full of coarse sand or glass to help with ignition.
Essentially, it can be made to work, it's just that we pretty much need to be living in the world of Fallout 3, to make it worthwhile.
I would suggest that the delusional fantasy crowd should aim at owning a flintlock instead, when one takes in to consideration that strike anywhere matches are getting rarer, and are as likely to be commonly available as primers will be, once the world ends. Anyone that thinks they can put up a supply of matches to last them will also be able to put up a supply of primers, eh?
Cheers
Trev