.357mag in .38 special

I'd have shot it. But I'd have it set aside and load then close the cylinder so the one with the .38Spl brass was shot first. That would avoid the lockup.

The "issue" with a hiccup like this is that the brass didn't get crimped due to being short. Other than that issue it was fine and could have been shot. But all in all you dealt with it in a better way by simply breaking it down.

It's good that I pulled it anyways, no powder inside, case was to short to actuate the Dillon powder hopper. Now I sorted all 1600 of my .357 Brass, and found 6 more .38 special.
 
U the same 6
It's good that I pulled it anyways, no powder inside, case was to short to actuate the Dillon powder hopper. Now I sorted all 1600 of my .357 Brass, and found 6 more .38 special.

Good call, squibs in revolvers can turn out badly. Curious about the source of the .38 SPL brass, range pick up?
 
I could see to never load a .357 load down to .38 special length. Then the pressure would spike. But if you load a .357 load in a .38 special case, to the .357 length, the case capacity is the same. Pressure would be the same. There would be just .135" less brass holding the bullet in.
 
.20 cent round in 1000 dollar gun. Do you feel lucky! WELL do ya.

I have done worse thing with no bad effects. But I am older now and just do not do crap if I can help it.
 
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