A grain is an old fashioned measure of weight.. there are 15.4323 grains in a gram.
For black powder it is a measure of volume.
Math class was a depressingly long time ago.
So, like my pellet guns, the lighter the bullet, the faster it goes.
Are you sure it's 15.43?
7000(grains per pound)/454(grams per pound)=15.41850220264317 according to my iphone calculator. That should mean 1 gram is equal to ~15.42 grains. Right? Math class was a depressingly long time ago.
I currently have 40 grain Winchester Golden Jacket.. I have seen 35 & 30 grain.
Am I correct in assuming that a grain is the size of the powder.
Bullet weight, as others are busy hashing out the conversions for.
Typically you get told what the bullet weight is, and how fast it supposedly goes (which is only really a sorta reference point, as they use their gun to test it, and you shoot it in a different one).
The commercial ammo makers do not normally use the same powders that are available to reloaders, so telling you how many grains of powder are in it would not do you any good at all.
To add to the confusion, some cartridge designations (their 'name'), refer to the amount of Black Powder they would have supposedly contained, such as the 45-70 (.45 caliber, 70 grains of black powder), also 45-90, 45-100, 45-110, etc. Supposedly, because the way cartridge cases were made is different than they are now, so the capacity is less. Trying to stuff 70 grains of Black Powder into a 45-70 case is a bit of a fight, without using a balloon head case!
There are almost as many exceptions and examples of it being done differently, as there are rules for the English language. It is confusing!
But on a .22 rimfire box, you are seeing the weight of the bullet. Normally!
Cheers
Trev
We are talking rimfire, where there is much less variation in velocity between various rifles. As to the powder type and weight; since we don't reload rimfires, it is not applicable.
can you buy pre-primered brass and load your own .22's
...
Are you sure it's 15.43?
7000(grains per pound)/454(grams per pound)=15.41850220264317 according to my iphone calculator. That should mean 1 gram is equal to ~15.42 grains. Right? Math class was a depressingly long time ago.
can you buy pre-primered brass and load your own .22's
can you buy pre-primered brass and load your own .22's
There are several centerfire .22 rounds that are definitely reloadable, but nothing for rimfire.
I'm sure it COULD be done, if a manufacturer ever decided to give it a shot... But with no reloading supplies, equipment or data available for the task, not to mention no profit margin at all, I really don't see it ever happening.
Sure is would be more expensive than buying them given it is all machine made. Look at a box of Fed or Win brass vs. ammo, not much diff in price.
We are talking rimfire, where there is much less variation in velocity between various rifles. As to the powder type and weight; since we don't reload rimfires, it is not applicable.
I have worked in the firearm industry since 1977 and have never seen primed rimfire brass for reloading .
There is variation enough. But for the most part, it just gives a baseline to compare between so called High Velocity, and Standard Velocity, etc. loads. I have never heard of anyone getting their money back because theirs didn't shoot exactly the velocity listed on the box, have you?
I have seen it listed for sale, Stateside, and have seen several posts on different forums referring to it being available (usually in minimum qty's of 5000 per purchase) for the target shooters to load with.
Some guys have done some pretty cool testing with BP .22 rimfire loads and found that their consistency is far and away better than the commercial smokeless loads.
It is (or at least, was) out there, but not very common at all.I've not seen it in person either.
Some guys just pull bullets and start from there. There are at least a couple wildcats based on necked down .22 LR cases too. Lotsa fun there, eh, resizing a live primer'ed case!
Many of the target shooting assn's have rules that disallow reloaded rimfire ammo due to the lack of availability and the associate risks. But some guys like playing around with the stuff.
Cheers
Trev




























