9.0 of N320 is close to full power for a 44 MAg. For a good reduced power plinking load, try 6 to 7.5 gr.
Welcome to 'the next step' of reloading; where you take your sanity in your own hands and stray below (never above) the reloading manual.
As Ganderite says, no need to go all the way to 9 grains - you could likely go as low as 5, but at that point the load is not generating enough heat to burn all the powder, and you end-up with a mess. But you have little to fear going below the 'start-at' manual loads.
As an example; Vihtavuori lists 3.7 gr N310 as the minimum load for .45 with a 200gr LSWC, giving 827 fps -
http://www.vihtavuori(dot)com/en/reloading-data/handgun-reloading/-45-acp.html
- I prefer 3.3gr, though I'll go up to 3.6 - and for velocities I'm happy in the mid-600's; again, how much power / velocity do you need to kill a piece of paper? I'd shoot ~warmer out of a .44 magnum because of the big case and pressure loss at the flash gap - but the lightest .44 load of N310 that Vihtavuori calls-for, is 10gr for 1,250 fps -
http://www.vihtavuori(dot)com/en/reloading-data/handgun-reloading/-44-remington-magnum-.html
- why? For a lubed 204gr lead SWC, 650 fps will do me fine, and the load will be a lot quieter and less obnoxious.
My go-to load for .357 is 3.3gr Titewad in .38 Special cases, with a ~125gr LRN bullet, sized 0.358". You won't find this load in a manual - because Hodgdon doesn't even list Titewad as a pistol powder. Yet this load is light, clean and quiet - throws the little slug with enough oomph to bowl-over tin rabbits on the steels range, yet almost no recoil in a full-underlug 6" revolver, and very accurate so the guests at the open house can hit what they shoot at. And this is the exact same load I use in 9mm, with a 124gr Lee LTC; enough power to cycle the action, mild, quiet and accurate without too much smoke.
This is why I suggest getting a Chrony - a couple starter loads I worked-out for the .45 when I started loading for it, had disturbing variances in velocity - >100 fps in the 550-fps range over 5 rounds; that's too much inconsistency, and I don't use those loads anymore. Were they dangerous? - I doubt it; they likely didn't have enough powder in them to be dangerous. But I didn't like them, so I don't use them anymore. And I found-out because of the Chrony - it's a valuable reloading tool. Next - a lead hardness tester.


















































