Maybe the cowboy ammo? That's lower than standard I believe. Full wadcutter target ammo is definitely lower pressure and velocity, but I haven't seen any offered commercially for a while. - danDoes anyone know anywhere in Ontario that sells low pressure .38 special suitable for an antique revolver?
huh?Smokeless powder has a sharper pressure spike then black powder. The spike is a issue not the pressure. So look to black powder for old antiques.
Not sure if you reload, but I used to load 2.7 grains of bullseye with 148 gr wadcutters and it is a very light load.Does anyone know anywhere in Ontario that sells low pressure .38 special suitable for an antique revolver?
Get into handloading. You're rolling the dice with factory ammo.Does anyone know anywhere in Ontario that sells low pressure .38 special suitable for an antique revolver?
That’s super uber very definitly unlikely.i bet the original caliber for that revolver was .38 long colt
Its no necessarily the pressure level but the rate at which the pressure builds.huh?
What is the "spike" if not pressure?
Look to the stickies above, this is an old topic.
BP or one of the substitutes is the way to go.You would probably have to load your own, using blackpowder. There may well be documented loads using trailboss.
Yes a Pressure Spike is what we are trying to avoid.Its no necessarily the pressure level but the rate at which the pressure builds.
BP or one of the substitutes is the way to go.
Don't know of a 38 special that could be a antique ( in Canada)Does anyone know anywhere in Ontario that sells low pressure .38 special suitable for an antique revolver?




























