I have a SoS 3" and an early blued pug. I keep both mine stoked with 180gr full wadcutters over 7.5g of Unique and Fed LPPs. They're accurate and controllable in DA with this load and both guns seem to stand up to the load well.
Looking into the chambers at those full wads is pretty...
I think my favorite big bore SA is a 4&5/8" .45 convertible. Robust enough for your manliest handloads and then you can shoot standard hardball through the ACP cylinder and they're like .22s. Mine never has liked .45ACP SWCs, though. The band is too wide and it hangs on the headspace ring. Ball...
I have a stainless 7.5" Dragoon that will shoot any .44 Mag load manufactured and most reasonable +Ps. They're essentially a SuperDeeOoper Blackhawk. (fits fine in a Super Blackhawk holster. Heavy enough to soak up any recoil generated by heavy loads, too. When you explain to people how...
OP, I recommend you put aside all your reloading equipment and supplies and read a quality reloading manual cover-to-cover. And do not use gunshop employees for reloading advice unless you personally know they're proficient (and even then seek confirmation of anything they tell you).
As far as...
It may also be educational to try some small pistol magnum primers in the SPP brass. Everything I've read indicates SPP makes no diff in .45, but if it does the mag primer may make up the difference.
Sounds like their QC dept isn't doing their job.
The .44 SPL could be loaded and shot in your .44 MAG, but I wouldn't load it to .44 MAG levels, in case someone fired it in a real .44 SPL. But .44 Winchester is .44-40, isn't it? That wouldn't work at all.
Take them to your gun club or local range and give them away. Or advertise on craigslist free to a good reloader's home.
Put them away in case you ever load something that can use them.
Or if you really want to get rid of them just throw them in the trash. A common aerosol can has more...
Have you tried new brass to see if you get the same problem? If not, it's probably dirty pockets.
I clean brass in a Thumler's with steel pins. It completely cleans the pockets like new and solves that problem.
If you want your brass to dry quickly, final rinse it in very hot water with a teaspoon of Lemishine per 5 gal of water. Let the brass stay in the hot water long enough to heat up (10 - 15 minutes). Drain the brass, roll it in a towel, then transfer to a dry towel. It will dry in just a few...
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