- Location
- Western Manitoba
Pick up a 4th edition Hornady manual. They have good, aggressive data in that one. The data in the latest manual is very watered down.
That is a curious observation - is the difference between maybe later ones are pressure tested and earlier ones done "by eye"? I do note in my Hornady #9 book that Hornady dis-avows all previously published data by them - so hand loader is basically "on their own" if using old books?
Is a comment in John Barsness article or book - he says Hagel or Wooters mentioned that they wished they could "call back" some of the loads they had published in the past - because they are now aware of aspects (pressure?) that they were not, back then.
As previously mentioned in other posts - we have found errors in data on-line and in loading manuals - found that by comparing three or four or five sources for information - instead of relying on "one" source. Mistakes happen - I am sure it is a clerical or "cut and paste" type of error - but when new guy relies on Start level load, from one source, and is higher then multiple other Maximum loads - even using same company's previous book data - should be signal that something is wonky - but if you only know of one source, would not know whether it is reasonable or not.
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