vtsnowedin
Elite Member
Yes you should start low and work up for safety but if you do not sort your brass you will have a hard time deciding what low is. Just sticking to the low or mid load if you are mixing brass will give you very large group sizes.
The name of the game is
"THE SAME"
You want a lot of the SAME brass that has been fired the SAME number of times, all sized the SAME way, and trimmed to the exact SAME length and chamfered with the SAME tool, Then you need to reprime them with the SAME primers seated with the SAME pressure and charged with the exact SAME amount of powder where you move the charge handle the SAME way each round, then seat the SAME bullets to the SAME depth and crimp them all (or not) the SAME way to the SAME pressure taking care that they are all seated perfectly in line with the bore using the SAME technique to prevent misalignment.
Low speed load, middle speed load, or max load if you want ammo you can count on "THE NAME OF THE GAME IS THE SAME.
Note: All of the above is totally ripped off from something I read in a gun publication long ago. My apologies to the original author.
The name of the game is
"THE SAME"
You want a lot of the SAME brass that has been fired the SAME number of times, all sized the SAME way, and trimmed to the exact SAME length and chamfered with the SAME tool, Then you need to reprime them with the SAME primers seated with the SAME pressure and charged with the exact SAME amount of powder where you move the charge handle the SAME way each round, then seat the SAME bullets to the SAME depth and crimp them all (or not) the SAME way to the SAME pressure taking care that they are all seated perfectly in line with the bore using the SAME technique to prevent misalignment.
Low speed load, middle speed load, or max load if you want ammo you can count on "THE NAME OF THE GAME IS THE SAME.
Note: All of the above is totally ripped off from something I read in a gun publication long ago. My apologies to the original author.