Handloading

People approach handloading from different perspectives. When I was moving every few years in the service, handloading just didn't seem to be practical. Things eventually evolved to where I had the time and space for a good loading shop. My approach may be unusual, but I was so intrigued with the game that I dived headfirst into it by selling a minty Colt Single Action .44 Spl. for enough money to buy every single piece of equipment I thought I might need, along with die sets for every major pistol caliber. While most people piecemeal themselves into the game, yours truly did it all at once.

I did a great deal of research before I got started, which really paid off. I still use every piece from my first RCBS outfit, and my 30-plus-year old Rockchucker is still down at the far right end of the loading bench. My primary interest was developing the best possible load for every gun I owned.

I know that this approach might be a little unusual, but it is far from unique. Many shooters try reloading as a matter of economy. Usually, that's because they are into a sport like action shooting or cowboy matches and they just can't afford the practice and match ammo off gun store shelves. This approach was the original goal of high volume. Thus, the handloader who rolled his own 148-grain LWC .38 Spl. rounds for bullseye matches may have transitioned to 147-grain 9 mms for the IPSC game. Some sports place a greater emphasis on consistently accurate ammunition, as with the NRA Outdoor Pistol matches. In this regard, one of the biggest challenges a reloader can face is the International Handgun Metallic Silhouette Association. In this sport, men and women shoot steel silhouettes of game animals at 50, 100, 150 and 200 meters. Considering the distance, the guns (and loads) have to be accurate, but since the targets are also heavy, the ammo has to be powerful enough to tumble the targets from their posts. Even the weather seems to be against the IHMSA shooter, where some ranges have powerful crosswinds and a few have tailwinds that tend to keep the silhouettes in place, even when hit. 

When you get right down to it, I suspect that unless you are a subsidized member of a police or military team, you are probably loading your own ammo in order to compete. In the absence of formal training on handloading, I would suggest that you find a friend who is into it and get some advice.  That's what I did and Knobby Walsh set me out on a path that lead to many days of fun shooting with handloads.

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4 Responses to Handloading

Larry J wrote:
December 02, 2011

Another reason to load your own is as a hedge against ammo shortages and non-availabilty, like in post-election 2008. Brass reloads several times and if you have interchangable components on hand it give you options. Example: 7.5x55 Swiss, 7.5x54 French, .308 Win (or sibling 7.62x51 NATO, .30-'06, etc. can all use the same diameter bullet. All use large rifle primers and you choose a general purpose medium type powder. Keeps your otherwise ammo orphans as shooters. And, as stated previously it is gratifying to make a handload more accurate than factory.

Allen wrote:
December 01, 2011

I also began this addiction with humble beginnings. A Lee loader in 45LC, because I looked all over town for ammo to only come up empty handed. A friend in college had one for his 38 and I had used his so I figured I knew all about this reloading gig!...Right. Now I look at one of my loading benches with 2 Diilon 550's an RCBS 4x4,arbor press, portable press (for range use) my Star Lubrisizer, nearly a dozen H&G, Lyman, and RCBS molds, dies for calibers I have never owned and buckets of brass just waiting for my spare time. And,,,it's still fun.

Gary wrote:
November 30, 2011

A while back, a great controversy arose in the world of handloading: using handloaded ammunition for self-defense. The scribes at all the magazines warned us to not even think about using our home-brewed ammo on the bad guys. Not because it wasn't reliable but because attorneys would rip us a new one for creating exotic rounds that were way too powerful and destructive for use on humans. I know that doesn't make any sense but that was the dogma of the time. We could rationalize that our bullets and velocities were the same as factory ammo but "why take a chance." About that time, Sheriff Jim Wilson wrote that he had searched and searched for any court case where the use of handloaded ammunition played any part in the outcome of a shooting and came up empty. The trial was all about WHY you shot, not about what you shot WITH. He put out a call for anyone that had any additional information on the subject to contact him but I don't know the outcome of that request. Today, ammunition companies take out full-page color advertisements promoting just how devastating their particular brand is for completely destroying the bad guy, complete with pictures of perfectly expanded bullets and ballistic-gelatin penetration tests. The only thing missing is a corpse with gaping holes and missing body parts. We have now come full circle: handloaded ammo is humane in comparison to the nuclear-tipped ammo available over the counter.

Walt wrote:
November 30, 2011

I have found that friends interesting in starting to reload that look at my reloading room and see all the components, dies, machines, gages and the like, get a bit overwhelmed at it all. I guess that to a beginner it is a lot to take in. I've found that just having them do one thing at a time, like seating bullets, help them overcome the fear of it all and shows them they can do it and that when taken a step at a time, it is pretty easy. Some people, as well as ranges and shooting schools, feel that reloaded ammo is more dangerous than factory loads and prohibit its use. However, I think with all the recent recalls of factory ammo this mindset is changing. It certainly is among my doubting friends. I have been reloading for 40 years now. I prefer my own ammo to factory in all of my rifles, as I get a much great sense of satisfaction when I do well in a match or on a hunt knowing that I made the rounds that did the deed. And as you say there is the cost factor. I certainly could not shoot as much as I do if I was restricted to store bought stuff.