TargetAcquired
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- S. Ontario
I'm almost hesitant to post this, so try not to throw stones.
While I am fairly new to reloading, I read and reference the ABCs, and the Lyman 49th and Lee manuals are on my bench, and have been referenced on several occasions. All my brass was FL sized, paired to a single rifle, and will stay that way (For .303 alone I have 3 different rifles, each with thier own 200 lot of brass). I'm just attempting to say that I play safe and on-campus.
I am now (soon to be) reloading for 2 calibers, and within those calibers I would like to develop different, but acceptable loads for casual plinking, longer-range stuff, hunting, and maybe the odd train robbery. And in those variance I'd like to experiment (i.e. different projectiles or powders). I have not loaded cartridge #1 yet in this vein, I have first created a list of items to consider (again, just to make sure I cover all the right bases). One of them that I put down but have yet to put any thought into is sorting. Yes, I can just box them all seperately, but because a lot of the brass and projectiles will match, I'd like to figure out a way that is more discernable.
Before posting this I did perform a forum search, used a few different terms and looked back into last year, but didn't really find what I need, so I apologize if this has already been discusseed ad nauseum (forget my passport, birth certificate or tattoos - apologizing for an infraction I might have not even commited is more proof of my Canadian Nationality than I'll ever need).
I'm not sure if cartridge sealers are a specific product, but I'm wondering if I can just use cheap nail polish in different colours for a 2-pronged effect: seal the bullets and primers (in case there is a development that works, but don't particularly like, and want to just leave it on the shelf indefinitely), and also colour-code that particular load, and then I could just have a legend card in the ammo locker for reference if I needed it. Using a few appropriate combinations of powders and projectiles, I might have 5 different loads for the same rifle, so I'm thinking this may be a cheap, easy, and effective way of making them clearly discernable.
I'm sure there are very appropriate, or specific products that are used for sealing, I'm just asking if there would be any potential problems with my idea. Objective #1 is purely identification, but if there is a side-effect of sealing, then that is just icing. Or gravy. Whichever sounds better.
While I am fairly new to reloading, I read and reference the ABCs, and the Lyman 49th and Lee manuals are on my bench, and have been referenced on several occasions. All my brass was FL sized, paired to a single rifle, and will stay that way (For .303 alone I have 3 different rifles, each with thier own 200 lot of brass). I'm just attempting to say that I play safe and on-campus.
I am now (soon to be) reloading for 2 calibers, and within those calibers I would like to develop different, but acceptable loads for casual plinking, longer-range stuff, hunting, and maybe the odd train robbery. And in those variance I'd like to experiment (i.e. different projectiles or powders). I have not loaded cartridge #1 yet in this vein, I have first created a list of items to consider (again, just to make sure I cover all the right bases). One of them that I put down but have yet to put any thought into is sorting. Yes, I can just box them all seperately, but because a lot of the brass and projectiles will match, I'd like to figure out a way that is more discernable.
Before posting this I did perform a forum search, used a few different terms and looked back into last year, but didn't really find what I need, so I apologize if this has already been discusseed ad nauseum (forget my passport, birth certificate or tattoos - apologizing for an infraction I might have not even commited is more proof of my Canadian Nationality than I'll ever need).
I'm not sure if cartridge sealers are a specific product, but I'm wondering if I can just use cheap nail polish in different colours for a 2-pronged effect: seal the bullets and primers (in case there is a development that works, but don't particularly like, and want to just leave it on the shelf indefinitely), and also colour-code that particular load, and then I could just have a legend card in the ammo locker for reference if I needed it. Using a few appropriate combinations of powders and projectiles, I might have 5 different loads for the same rifle, so I'm thinking this may be a cheap, easy, and effective way of making them clearly discernable.
I'm sure there are very appropriate, or specific products that are used for sealing, I'm just asking if there would be any potential problems with my idea. Objective #1 is purely identification, but if there is a side-effect of sealing, then that is just icing. Or gravy. Whichever sounds better.


















































