Do any of you fellows use this powder and is it still available?
It is available, note that Norma MRP is identical to Reloader 22, was more common in the 80's and became very popular at that time albeit expensive, was considered the optimum powder for large magnum cartridges.
Do any of you fellows use this powder and is it still available?
Around 30 years ago I was on a US reloading site, Accurate reloading maybe? There was a long debate about MRP vs Reloader 22, one guy that claimed to work at the factory had all the specs and said is was the same they just changed the package. I know Christopher Columbus said never trust what you read on the internet, but 2 grains difference could be a lot to lot varent in volume or FPS in a 70ish grain load. Powders are a little different on many burn rate charts depending on when and who published them.
Around 30 years ago I was on a US reloading site, Accurate reloading maybe? There was a long debate about MRP vs Reloader 22, one guy that claimed to work at the factory had all the specs and said is was the same they just changed the package. I know Christopher Columbus said never trust what you read on the internet, but 2 grains difference could be a lot to lot varent in volume or FPS in a 70ish grain load. Powders are a little different on many burn rate charts depending on when and who published them.
I recall that thread. It was interesting. Lot of good stuff on AR. - dan
Around 30 years ago I was on a US reloading site, Accurate reloading maybe? There was a long debate about MRP vs Reloader 22, one guy that claimed to work at the factory had all the specs and said is was the same they just changed the package. I know Christopher Columbus said never trust what you read on the internet, but 2 grains difference could be a lot to lot varent in volume or FPS in a 70ish grain load. Powders are a little different on many burn rate charts depending on when and who published them.
I have been using Norma MRP since it appeared to replace old Norma 205
It is NOT identical to Reloder 22. about 2 grains different in most chamberings, as hh mentioned above. I have found MRP to be relatively temp stable, RL22 is not. Dave.
What do you and HH mean by 2 grains slower?
It means that it takes 2 more grains (of the slower powder) to reach the same pressure as the faster powder, with the same bullet, brass, and primer.