by Seismic Sam on Sun Jan 20, 2013 10:10 am
Okay - a couple of clarifications - the powder you buy in 1 - 8 pound containers does NOT, repeat NOT have any noticable variations. The whole point of cannister grade powder is to blend it very carefully like Scotch, so it's exactly the same every time. If that couldn't be done, then the whole handloading industry would have never come into being. Now, there are BULK powders out there which DO vary from lot to lot, and these are generally sold to ammunition manufacturers in whole lot quantities, which can be multiple tons in size, and the ammo manufacturer then works out their loads with a pressure gun and a chrono, aand then runs out that lot of powder making ammo in large lots. Some factory ammo (like hunting ammo) is loaded to give the same ballistics every time, and some personal defense ammo (Like CorBon) is loaded to a constant pressure to give you a near max load according to SAAMI limits every time.
Now, over a period of years or decades, powders can evolve, and this can be because new cartridges come along, or manufacturers go from a 1:12 twist to a 1:7 twist with .223's, or because that year there was a 30% spike in lazy n00bs who didn't RTFM and injured themselves, and the corporate lawyers FORCED them to lower the max loads. And no, I am not joking about this, because we had to deal with this in the medical device industry, and if there was an increase in patient injuries we HAD to do a risk review and alter the product or instructions for use to get the injury rate back to its historical levels. If you collect reloading manuals and compare them for some hot calibers like 10mm, it's not hard to tell which manuals are "lawyered up" and also by how much.
So I'm not surprised that a 6 year old manual has different data than today, because the handloading industry has grown enormously over the last 30 years, and 30 years ago you could go for years at a time without a new cartridge being introduced. Today you can call up Bell, and if you have the money you can have damn near anything made up, be it good (like the 204 Ruger) of bad (Like the 50 Beowulf) and put it out there on the market.
And this is also showing up in manual updating, and Hornady has set some sort of record going from the 7th Edition up to the 9th edition, and a lot of that has to do with the fact that they have helped develop some interesting new cartridges in partnership with gun companies, and so they have to publish the data for these new offspring of theirs. I think it took Hornady close to a decade to go from the 2nd Edition to the 3rd Edition.
With the 45 ACP, however, if you have a chrono it's no big deal if the data in the manuals changes a bit. You can always do something about it if your chrono data changes, but the 45 ACP is a century old very low pressure cartridge whose max PSI is only 21,000, and 1911's today are better machined and built, plus have much more consistent metallurgy than back in WWII. With a max load for a357 Sig or a 338 Ultramag it IS a different story, and there you have to be fairly careful in what you're doing. Retumbo did have a recall because some of their early lots had a different density, so if you threw the same charge of 98.3 grains with a certain measure setting, the load was noticably hotter.