by selurcspi on Wed Jun 03, 2009 8:11 pm
One time a shooting partner and I were reloading for each other on my press. We had to change powder due to a dearth of our normal fodder and even though we had worked up the loads previously with this other powder and it was simply a matter of reading our log and set up the press, my friend misread the scale and set it up 1 grain too light. It doesn't sound like much, but at about 25% it made a big difference in a Steyer GB, in the middle of a stage I had a bullet that didn't leave the barrel, but it cycled like a normal load, and I pulled the trigger again, this time the second bullet met the first and it bulged my barrel and blew the hot gasses into my glasses an embedded unburnt powder in them. That was the last time anyone loaded ammo that I shoot.
NRA, MADFI, MN DNR, Certified Instructor
"The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money."
Margaret Thatcher