Being new to reloading I am reading everything I can.
Quoted below are parts of an article that I found. The part I had trouble with was calculating case capacity. It seems to assume that water weighs the same or has the same density as all types of powder.
Is this guy out to lunch or is this a standard way of measuring case capacity and load density?
Quoted below are parts of an article that I found. The part I had trouble with was calculating case capacity. It seems to assume that water weighs the same or has the same density as all types of powder.
Is this guy out to lunch or is this a standard way of measuring case capacity and load density?
http://www.gunnersden.com/index.htm.rifle-reloading-powder.html
Load Density
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Load density is the ratio between case capacity and actual powder charge. Most factory ammunition is loaded with a density of 80% - 90% of the cartridge case capacity.
<snip>
How to figure load density.
Powder charge weight divided by case capacity equals load density.
Example: Powder charge 40 grains (divided by) Case capacity 50 grains = .8 or 80% load density.
Case Capacity
Case capacity is the amount of volume inside a cartridge case that is available for the powder to fill.
How To Measure Case Capacity.
Measuring case capacity is actually quite simple. Once you have established your bullet seating depth in the bullet section of this guide.
1. Weigh one case with bullet seated to proper depth without powder or primer.
2. Now fill the case with water through the primer hole using a hyperdermic needle and weigh again.
3. Now subtract dry weight from the water weight and this will give you your case capacity.
Example:
470 grains = water weight with bullet.
- 420 grains = empty weight with bullet.
50 grain = case capacity.
a. 50 grain capacity x 80% load density = 40 grains of powder.
b. 50 grain capacity x 90% load density = 45 grains of powder.