The Bullet Barn and Rusty Wood carry brass or cut down .45 Colt.
http://www.thebulletbarn.com/brass.html
http://www.rustywood.ca/starline.html
i wasnt aware there were any factory 45 schofield loads.....unless maybe fiocchi makes them. thats an obsolete round. The new uberti schofields are mostly in 44-40 or 45 colt i think, and the original schofield owners usually handload theirs.
Having said that, fiocchi 455 webley will chamber and fire just fine in my original schofield, as its the same diameter, just shorter casing. those can be bought from canada ammo for the best price I've seen anywhere.
I suspect that you're going to be forced into reloading by the lack of availability even if the high price doesn't scare you away first.
I'd suggest that you not spend tons of time in looking for the ammo considering how rare it would be. Instead begin reading and moving towards reloading. Even on a small scale modest basis you'll quickly be able to make all the ammo you could ask for and have it available when you want instead of scouring the land like this.
I'm not aware of any factory 45 S&W being available in Canada. If you did find some I would expect it to be expensive, like in the $40-$50 range per box of 50. I load Schofield for under $10 per box of 50.
If you're starting to get interested in semi-obscure cartidges like the 45 S&W Schofield then it's time to start thinking about getting into reloading. You can't go there without it.
Thanks - I had this uneasy feeling from the start. Following the reality check - any comment if the 45 Schofield does need the crimping die? - all I have seen so far on eBay are the 3 die sets ?
Thanks
You are right - the prices I have seen down south are all in the 50 range. And so are the Webleys here.
What bullets are you using to re-load? - they supposed to be .454 - the closest one is Webley at .455 and then there are those available from Bullet Barn at .452 - do you do your own casting?
thanks
For cast bullets the shape almost always has a generous cannelure groove. That groove allows you to seat and roll crimp using the one combo seating and crimping die all in one go. You're new so you may not know how to set such a die. It's pretty easy if you stop and consider. First you start with a blank casing in the seating position and the ram fully up. Screw down the die until you feel a slight resistance. Check that it's not actually crimping the lip at this point. Back it off a turn from there and lock the nut lightly. Now put a bullet into place and use the middle seating depth adjuster to sneak down on seating the bullet so it pushes the bullet in just to where the casing rim is near the top edge of the cannelure groove. You'll do this by making a tweak and seating, lower and look, tweak a little more and seat again, lower and look.... repeat as needed until it's at the right depth. Now back out the seating screw by a good half dozen turns so it's well out of the way. Next is to set the crimp. You need to turn in the barrel and then raise the ram with a little force. Lower and look. You're looking for an easily seen rounding in but not so heavy that it produces a bulge in the side wall below the crimp. And you only want enough that you can see it easily without it being more. More can be fine but it does shorten the life of the brass. Once the crimp is set snug up the locking nut on the outer barrel with a wrench or pliers so it doesn't move. Now put your seated and crimped bullet back into the ram and raise it. You can now lower the seating adjustment back down until it contacts the bullet. You're done.
If for some reason you're ever forced to load rimless casings with lead bullets that have no or very little cannelure groove then you can still do this. But instead of a combo seat and crimp all in one operation you'll want to separate the two. If there's no sizable groove you can experience "lead plowing" if you try to do both jobs in one pull. I've done that and got the ruined bullets to show for it. Instead you'll need to seat them all, then set the crimp with the seating adjuster pulled back and crimp only on a second pull.
Most revolver bullets have a pretty good cannelure groove though.
Ok - so I am almost there -
- got the brass
- got the bullets
- got the powder
now - for the primers - it is Large Pistol Primer > LEE reloading manual recommends Winchester for 45 Schofield - not for me to question Lee but I read a comment that some primers do not work with some presses . Like in " no Federal primers in Lee 1000 Progresive".
I just put my money on the Hornady Lock and Load Classic - do not have it yet and not able to verify what does the manual says, so in case anyone can share their practical experience ?
Thanks all and Merry Christmas/Happy New Year
Thanks - I had this uneasy feeling from the start. Following the reality check - any comment if the 45 Schofield does need the crimping die? - all I have seen so far on eBay are the 3 die sets ?
Thanks