You are doing a great job of making the old girl look happy again.
I have several of these and they all are happy to eat ammo which is $12 a box, tops. Because I am so nice to them, they shoot nice, tight groups. I know, that is surplus-ammo prices but the stuff shoots Match Grade because I cook it up in my own basement. This summer, they all are going to make the acquaintance of some of this $2 a box stuff I have been cooking up: cast bullets made from old wheelweights.
If you order from a website such as fsreloading, you are buying your equipment at US distributors' prices rather than Canadian retail prices. CBSA charges you $5 plus GST on the contents and you have your equipment for MUCH less than your local shop pays for it. And it's the SAME equipment. To set up for loading jacketed bullets AND cast bullets AND making and sizing your own cast slugs will set you back about the price of 5 or 6 boxes of ammo and the equipment will last you a lifetime. Get a press, scale, measure and so forth and a set of .303 dies, also a set of the Lee Collet Die equipment for match-grade homemade ammo.
Lots of guys on here with lots of expertise in loading this cartridge and they are all willing to help.
Get some pony-tail ties ($1 per 100) from your local dollar store and use them on the bases of your shells at first firing. You end up with cases fire-formed to YOUR chamber. For loading supplies, start with 1 box each of Hornady Spire Point 150-grain slugs and Sierra Pro-Hunter 180-grain. Those, plus your cast slugs, should do you forever. You stock ONE type of powder for jacketed slugs (I recommend 4895) and another for cast bullets..... and you store them APART so you don't get them mixed up.
MY rifles like the Sierra bullet (seated to the OAL of a Mark 7 Ball round) with 37 or 38 grains of the 4895 powder; this is NOT a nasty load, rather mild in fact, but it is very accurate. You can use 40 or 41 of the same powder with the 150s (seated the same way) for a good deer load.
If you don't want to buy too many more boxes of $27 ammo, get some Prvi Partizan brass; it is closest to the old military dimensions. You can get it in big bags from Trade-Ex: tab at 10 o'clock from the GN Beaver, top of this page.
You load your cast bullets with 13 grains of Red Dot shotgun powder. These are your plinking loads and they are 10 cents a shot, so you can shoot 100 shells in a range session and not have to sell the kids. Best of all, you have money left over to buy another rifle!
Give it a try. Your first efforts might not be perfect, but they won't be $27, either!
Hope this helps.
.
I have several of these and they all are happy to eat ammo which is $12 a box, tops. Because I am so nice to them, they shoot nice, tight groups. I know, that is surplus-ammo prices but the stuff shoots Match Grade because I cook it up in my own basement. This summer, they all are going to make the acquaintance of some of this $2 a box stuff I have been cooking up: cast bullets made from old wheelweights.
If you order from a website such as fsreloading, you are buying your equipment at US distributors' prices rather than Canadian retail prices. CBSA charges you $5 plus GST on the contents and you have your equipment for MUCH less than your local shop pays for it. And it's the SAME equipment. To set up for loading jacketed bullets AND cast bullets AND making and sizing your own cast slugs will set you back about the price of 5 or 6 boxes of ammo and the equipment will last you a lifetime. Get a press, scale, measure and so forth and a set of .303 dies, also a set of the Lee Collet Die equipment for match-grade homemade ammo.
Lots of guys on here with lots of expertise in loading this cartridge and they are all willing to help.
Get some pony-tail ties ($1 per 100) from your local dollar store and use them on the bases of your shells at first firing. You end up with cases fire-formed to YOUR chamber. For loading supplies, start with 1 box each of Hornady Spire Point 150-grain slugs and Sierra Pro-Hunter 180-grain. Those, plus your cast slugs, should do you forever. You stock ONE type of powder for jacketed slugs (I recommend 4895) and another for cast bullets..... and you store them APART so you don't get them mixed up.
MY rifles like the Sierra bullet (seated to the OAL of a Mark 7 Ball round) with 37 or 38 grains of the 4895 powder; this is NOT a nasty load, rather mild in fact, but it is very accurate. You can use 40 or 41 of the same powder with the 150s (seated the same way) for a good deer load.
If you don't want to buy too many more boxes of $27 ammo, get some Prvi Partizan brass; it is closest to the old military dimensions. You can get it in big bags from Trade-Ex: tab at 10 o'clock from the GN Beaver, top of this page.
You load your cast bullets with 13 grains of Red Dot shotgun powder. These are your plinking loads and they are 10 cents a shot, so you can shoot 100 shells in a range session and not have to sell the kids. Best of all, you have money left over to buy another rifle!
Give it a try. Your first efforts might not be perfect, but they won't be $27, either!
Hope this helps.
.
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