I'm guessing, likely because the ACP has a smaller case capacity and lower pressure per unit of powder. The 45 colt can throw a bullet faster than the ACP though.
...so shooting the acp through a rifle, could i load it to 1000 fps with a 230 grain cast bullet? ...or does the case capacity limit what i can do with it?
thanks for your help
It's an apples and oranges thing. They cartridges are not the same. Not even the bullet diameter.
Trick question...................
What is the cylinder gap on the .45 ACP...........................where do you loose pressure, and what do you do to get it back.
And there aren't any Winchester 1892's in 45 ACP!! Not that I know of anyways.
You're right, I said it the wrong way around. My apologies.Good guess... You are correct, though it's actually HIGHER pressure per unit of powder due to the smaller case volume!
Trick question...................
What is the cylinder gap on the .45 ACP...........................where do you loose pressure, and what do you do to get it back.
A 230 grain cast bullet loaded in a .45 Colt requires 7+ grains of Unique in order to generate the same velocity as the same 230 grain bullet in a .45 ACP loaded with 5+ grains. Why?
...so shooting the acp through a rifle, could i load it to 1000 fps with a 230 grain cast bullet? ...or does the case capacity limit what i can do with it?
thanks for your help



























