I did experiment with cast loads in a Norc M14S/M305 I used to own and managed to find some that would cycle without leading. I was using 185gr .311" GC'ed bullets, pure WW alloy, water dropped, lubed with Lee alox. According to my records I had success with H4895, IMR4895, and H4198. Loads of 33gr, 34gr, and 34gr respectively are marked as decently accurate with 100% reliability for cycling. I never chronied any of them but if memory serves they were pretty light on the recoil.I did't cast 160gr for 30-30, but that is around 1000fps which is good for win 94 but I'm not sure my M1A would eat that. Did you try led on .308 semiauto?
Well, I cannot argue with that, but that #### is good enough for 100 yard range, which is my main distanse.
At 100 yards I want my shots touching. Tula, Barnaul, MFS isn't going to do that for me.
If you just want to shoot cheap ammo to make noise get an SKS....$200/1000 for that ammo.
WHO said anything about SURPLUS powder?- just b/c you buy in kegs or half kegs doesn't mean surplus- it's ww748 that I use- fresh stuff from olin and not pulldown- actually i'm kind of offended-
This is what I'm doing for hunting with my M1A and Win 94. But I also need some practise as well. As for parer punching on the range, I use cheap tula and andbarnaul. As for 30-30, this is reloading for the long time. Every time I buy new case of cheap Russian ammo, I'm thinking if I can reload and save even more. Campro bullets looks way to go for me.OP, for your stated shooting activity, deer hunting with a 308 and iron sights, I would strongly recommend you just completely forget about reloading.
Just buy a box of well known factory ammunition, like Remington, Winchester or Federal, in the bullet weight of your choice. Take a shot or two at something like a mark on a stump at 50 to a hundred yards. If it hits about where you aimed, go hunting. If it hits a few inches off your aiming mark, and you thought you were holding steady, adjust the sights and try again.
The iron sights that come with your rifle when you bought it are hard to adjust. If it shoots to the left you will want to tap the front sight to the left a bit.
If it shoots low, you will want to raise the rear sight.
In real life, back in the great depression era when rural people shot wild game year around to live on, 99 percent of their rifles had the simple open iron sights that came with their Winchester and similar rifles. When a homesteader checked his sights and found it shot a bit higher than he liked, he would likely remark, "I'll just take a finer bead," meaning he would hold so the front sight was lower in the rear notch.
Whatever it took, those people killed nearly all of the animals they shot at.
At 100 yards I want my shots touching. Tula, Barnaul, MFS isn't going to do that for me.
If you just want to shoot cheap ammo to make noise get an SKS....$200/1000 for that ammo.
Well, I have SKS and several crates of good cheap chinesse and russian surplus. This is just for fun when I'm on range with kids. I need practise with my main hunting rifles, and looking for options how to do this cheap enough.
OP, for your stated shooting activity, deer hunting with a 308 and iron sights, I would strongly recommend you just completely forget about reloading.
Just buy a box of well known factory ammunition, like Remington, Winchester or Federal, in the bullet weight of your choice. Take a shot or two at something like a mark on a stump at 50 to a hundred yards. If it hits about where you aimed, go hunting. If it hits a few inches off your aiming mark, and you thought you were holding steady, adjust the sights and try again.
The iron sights that come with your rifle when you bought it are hard to adjust. If it shoots to the left you will want to tap the front sight to the left a bit.
If it shoots low, you will want to raise the rear sight.
In real life, back in the great depression era when rural people shot wild game year around to live on, 99 percent of their rifles had the simple open iron sights that came with their Winchester and similar rifles. When a homesteader checked his sights and found it shot a bit higher than he liked, he would likely remark, "I'll just take a finer bead," meaning he would hold so the front sight was lower in the rear notch.
Whatever it took, those people killed nearly all of the animals they shot at.
yes you are right, I don't shoot my win 94 a lot, but I just figured out that 5000k is way to go.
Canam has primers for $25/1000 and $30/1000 with free shipping over $200....best prices going.
I buy them by the case of 5000.....2 cases gets you free shipping.An excellent option if he's combining it with some other goodies maybe!
Thank you, gentlemen, for sharing your wisdom, knowledge and experience with me, really appreciate that CGN spirit. Canam and Campro looks like the way to go. I will also try H4831 and bullet casting.
The only thing is powder, will really appreciate if you give me some idea who would sell 25 lb kegs. Never seen more than 8lb in retail.



























