That's a neat design. I've watched a couple of Youtube videos made by onwers. But it's only
one cartridge, right? It's a single-shot set-up. In other words, you're not going to buy a number of them to fill a magazine, right?
The nice thing about those small, light projectiles in that video is that you reload them just like you reload much larger projectiles and fill magazines with them, again, just like full-power, high-energy cartridges that take down game at long ranges.
In the comments section below the video (if you select "watch in Youtube"), there are some very interesting comments about using Lee bullet sizing dies to accomplish what the man in the video does with his thick steel swaging disks, but much faster, using 00 (53gr) or even 000 (60gr) shot, but I assume that using only the sizing die produces round nose projectiles (round at both ends like a medicine capsule) rather than flat, which would be just fine with me. (I'd like to know if single round he fired cycled the Norinco. I can't tell.)
If I was going to experiment with the 53 or 60gr projectiles to get the lowest velocity, quietest round possible (without having to buy a chronograph), I'd be lowering the powder charge down from 10gr until the first squib. Then I'd push the squib out with a dowel or brass rod and go with the next higher charge that consistently pushes the projectiles out the end of the barrel while producing the quietest report.
Speaking of squibs, I've never fired a gun and had a squib occur. Those of you who have had them occur, how difficult do you think it would be to push one of those short, 53gr projectiles out of a 9.5" barrel? Thanks.