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- Steel Town and The Peg
My handloads would turn out the lights for certain... and it's comforting to know that it hits point-of-aim inside 15 meters every time.How much stopping power is needed on a head shot?![]()
My handloads would turn out the lights for certain... and it's comforting to know that it hits point-of-aim inside 15 meters every time.How much stopping power is needed on a head shot?![]()
As far as I can tell .303 would have been the last black powder military cartridige ever adopted, and even then I am sure someone could still dig up another round adopted later.
The whole reason for keeping the 1882s had everything to do with cost. It was roughly a third the cost to make a 1882 over a Luger. Give the Lugers to the Infantry officers and those expected to be in combat, and the 1882s to those they felt were likely to never use it.
As mentioned reason they kept producing the 1882s and later 1929s was simply it was much cheaper to make those revolvers than to buy Lugers for everyone. Every model the Swiss adopted in the late 20s early 30s was a attempt to cheapen the cost of producing the firearms (which is fair considering they literally had their troops walking home with pretty much everything they made). M1929 Lugers and M1929 Revolver both are simplifications of the earlier models. The K31 was a cheaper design than the K11 to produce.
To the OP, as mentioned the cartridge is fairly similar to .32 S&W Long. It would also be fairly similar to .32 ACP or stronger than .25 ACP both very popular carry cartridges, and one a very popular military pistol cartridge for decades. Personally not my ideal round for 'manstopping' but all that doesn't matter if you can't hit your target in the first place.
There are NO manufacturing shortcuts on pre-1898 M1882 revolvers. They are among the most exquisitely finished revolvers you will ever find. Do a fit and finish comparison of pre-1898 M1882's to those manufactured after 1908, especially those made in the 1920's... you will clearly see less man power and time was spent to manufacture them. The M1929's are very crude.
As far as I can tell .303 would have been the last black powder military cartridge ever adopted, and even then I am sure someone could still dig up another round adopted later.
I should clarify, it was the last cartridge still in service using black powder. It's not hard to find cartridges adopted after it that used black powder in their initial form but they were all converted to smokeless or later dropped for a smokeless cartridge. 7.5mm Ordinance is an exception in that regard.
depends on a lot of factors: top strap variant, condition, use/abuse... but I tend to keep my loads in the ~865-900 fps range for plinking and target work. As noted above, I will occasionally pop a few more spirited loads. I don't risk squib loads. According to a few published sources, the latter 1882's are factory tested at ~26,000 psi... so I don't worry.
How can you tell which top strap your gun has? What do you think the maximum FPS would be for a thin strap model?
serial 4400 or less = thin strap
serial 4400 or more = medium strong strap
Keep thin strap pressures to around 32 S&W Long levels or a bit more and you're fine.
I load my medium strap M1882 into 38 Special territory.




























