So I just started reloading for a French 1873 model revolver chambered in 455webley and I'm a bit confused with some of the literature.
I read that a solid crimp is required for these to get good ignition. The bullets I'm using are molded after the original bullet (265gr hollow base round nose 11bh hardness). I'm using brand new starline brass and lee 455 dies.
The bullets have 3 lube grooves and no crimp groove. When I'm loading for maximum oal, the crimp is just on the solid surface of the bullet. Is that ok? Or should I switch to a bullet with an actual crimp groove like the 255gr swc from jet bullet?
I'm looking for a little more info on reloading recipes for this caliber. I only have the info from the info sheet that came with the dies and some obsolete reloading info I could find online.
I'm also wondering, my chamber throats are all around .470, is this excessively large for this caliber?
Cheers!!
Here is a picture of a dummy round I made to test fit and function. It shows where the crimp is on the bullet
I read that a solid crimp is required for these to get good ignition. The bullets I'm using are molded after the original bullet (265gr hollow base round nose 11bh hardness). I'm using brand new starline brass and lee 455 dies.
The bullets have 3 lube grooves and no crimp groove. When I'm loading for maximum oal, the crimp is just on the solid surface of the bullet. Is that ok? Or should I switch to a bullet with an actual crimp groove like the 255gr swc from jet bullet?
I'm looking for a little more info on reloading recipes for this caliber. I only have the info from the info sheet that came with the dies and some obsolete reloading info I could find online.
I'm also wondering, my chamber throats are all around .470, is this excessively large for this caliber?
Cheers!!
Here is a picture of a dummy round I made to test fit and function. It shows where the crimp is on the bullet

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