I have a couple of hundred .357 magnum loads I need to take apart and salvage at least the brass and bullets. Can anyone suggest the easiest way to do this?
Remove die from press. Push round through top of press and bite it with sidecutter. Pull down. Ruins bullet but saves brass and powder. Fast.
Remove die from press. Push round through top of press and bite it with sidecutter. Pull down. Ruins bullet but saves brass and powder. Fast.
Correct. The lead tends to collapse so the puller doesn't get a good grip.I do not think a collet puller will work on plated bullets.
I have a couple of hundred .357 magnum loads I need to take apart and salvage at least the brass and bullets. Can anyone suggest the easiest way to do this?
If the concern is squib loads and not overcharges, I would just shake them and listen for the powder. If you hear powder, shoot'em. Disassemble otherwise.
for that to work, there has to some room in the case for the powder to make that noise- i've just done a bunch of 44 mags and there is no noise - the only way to know if they're anywhere near right is to 1) check for powder as you make the round2) weigh it against a known round- basically, i weigh all my rounds, seperate the uppers and lowers, and then check it against what the total should be- ie a federal 44 mag case weighs 120 grains, roughly, the slug is 240 grains, and the powder is 9/10 grains and the primer is roughly 3- that's about 273 total- a double charge would weigh 283, and a squib would be 264- see how that works?
for that to work, there has to some room in the case for the powder to make that noise- i've just done a bunch of 44 mags and there is no noise - the only way to know if they're anywhere near right is to 1) check for powder as you make the round2) weigh it against a known round- basically, i weigh all my rounds, seperate the uppers and lowers, and then check it against what the total should be- ie a federal 44 mag case weighs 120 grains, roughly, the slug is 240 grains, and the powder is 9/10 grains and the primer is roughly 3- that's about 373 total- a double charge would weigh 383, and a squib would be 364- see how that works?