I'm wondering; with my own brass; I police it up; bag it and tag the bag with the make and number of times it's been fired. But I'm hazy on when I know I can't reload it anymore? I understand Seven times to be the limit in most cases and you should stop if the brass crack or bulges. But my copy of The Handloader's Guide says that some cases can just be trimmed past the crack and re-used; like trimming down cracked .357 to .38 special.
And what about found and given brass? I'm mainly reloading at the moment to save money, but I don't mix this stuff in and so far I collect more than I reload *or* shoot; some just for curiosity sake. What other physical cues are there to the given usefulness of brass? I never use stuff which has been exposed to undue heat such as from a fire or which appears overly rusted, but i wonder; I don't know where it's been and not all primers even differ in colour to give me a clue as to if I'm picking up someone else's reloads. I'd like to use it; can I just reload found/gifted brass till it has a visual sign of failure, or presume it's been fired at least twice if I have reason to and reload it fewer times?
Thanks for your time
And what about found and given brass? I'm mainly reloading at the moment to save money, but I don't mix this stuff in and so far I collect more than I reload *or* shoot; some just for curiosity sake. What other physical cues are there to the given usefulness of brass? I never use stuff which has been exposed to undue heat such as from a fire or which appears overly rusted, but i wonder; I don't know where it's been and not all primers even differ in colour to give me a clue as to if I'm picking up someone else's reloads. I'd like to use it; can I just reload found/gifted brass till it has a visual sign of failure, or presume it's been fired at least twice if I have reason to and reload it fewer times?
Thanks for your time


















































