l weigh every round as a matter of course, even using a progressive, but it seems its far easier to get a squib than a double charge- either waym i use only powder for pistols and one powder for rifles- and the rifle stuff is in the next room
------------------------------------------------------------l weigh every round as a matter of course, even using a progressive, but it seems its far easier to get a squib than a double charge- either waym i use only powder for pistols and one powder for rifles- and the rifle stuff is in the next room
Boomer, It was a great stroke of luck that you were shooting over a chronograph.
I have read on these threads so many times, when they are talking about loading too heavy, that the over-loads do not increase the velocity to any extent.
You sure proved that is all hogwash!
l weigh every round as a matter of course, even using a progressive, but it seems its far easier to get a squib than a double charge- either waym i use only powder for pistols and one powder for rifles- and the rifle stuff is in the next room
Thanks for the reminder Sig_1959. Glad you're safe.
Must have been quite the explosion since it looks like it took out the photo too -- getting "The specified image does not exist" from the link
Ditto with my progressive. I still catch the odd mistake weighing the casing after priming and after charging and inspecting the primer to see it didn't go in upside down....just part of the drill. Hard to manage 400 rounds an hour that way but if it avoids one exploding barrel that's ok with me.
Edited to add: should probably mention there's a downside to too much vigilance with a progressive. They were built for automatic operation and are probably best used that way, with careful inspection after the fact. E.g., if you pay too much attention to priming and charging, especially if you keep interrupting the sequence to weigh the cartridge, you will eventually forget to insert the bullet![]()