Here is a picture of three cases I will load and shoot.
Note the Norma case has the letters, "Re" on it. This was on the old Norma cases and we took it to mean they were reloadable.
The Dominion on the right is a head stamp of about the early, or mid 1960s.
The Dominion in the centre, marked D.C.Co. is the oldest CIL head stamp and I think it dates to pre WW2, and this one has a story behind it. Shortly after WW2 Fred Barnes renewed his custom bullet making and made 30 calibre bullets with regular copper tubing as jackets. This made a very solid bullet that really hung together and penetrated on game. I had a brother that bought a batch of the Barnes bullets in 200 grain and had a friend load them for him. The friend said he used 4350 powder and loaded them pretty hot, so he painted the primers red, to indicate this. Red can be seen around the primer in the centre cartridge.
I ended up with some of these loadings and some years ago I wondered what the load in them had been, so I pulled the bullet from this one and weighed the powder. Thus, the case in the centre was a loaded but not fired cartridge, with the bullet and powder now removed. So the case had been loaded from about 1948 until maybe in the 1990s, when I pulled the bullet.
A bullet still fits the neck like a newly sized case and the empty goes into the chamber on my rifle. So I will just put about 58 grains of 4350 in the case, put a 180 grain bullet in it and fire it, then I will show pictures of the fired cases when they are done.
Bruce
