by noylj on Mon Oct 31, 2016 4:13 pm
> - Am I right in assuming that the rifle rotor and powder metering insert will be more convenient to dispense 21-22 grains of H110?
Probably. 296/H110 meters so well, that it probably doesn't matter
> - I plan to go with Hornady dies and did not see a separate roll crimp die, so am thinking to purchase two of their seating dies and use one for seating and one for crimping.
For ALL your roll crimp needs, much better to buy a Redding Profile Crimp die.
> - I use PTX in other calibers and it works OK for me. Am I right in thinking that .357 one will work for this caliber? Am I better off using the expander die that will come in the set?
No, you don't need the expander that came with the dies—the PTX fulfills that purpose. The expander die is there for those that us a bench-mounted powder measure. Keep the expander die in the box and forget it even exists.
Now, regarding your load data:
I don't believe ANY one source is better than any other, so I always check multiple sources and will almost always use the lowest starting load. Of course, you are using the ONE powder where low starting loads can actually be a problem.
W296/H110 (yes, they have always been the same powder) is difficult to ignite and needs pressure and temperature to burn fully. There have been cases where the powder did not fully ignite and a semi-molten "wad" of powder was left lodged in the barrel. This "wad" acts as a barrel obstruction and can lead to gun/shooter injury. Thus, there are warnings about not starting much below the max load.
Checking the Hornady 9th edition, they show 296/H110 at start of 17.4gn to MAX of 20.4gn.
Thus, if your lot of powder, bullet, and such perform like Hornady found in their lab, you will be starting over MAX.
Last edited by
noylj on Tue Nov 01, 2016 3:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.