Rim Search By Serial Number
In doing some research, I cannot work out what model rim it is exactly; in fact I can't find anything that looks like it anywhere! I've attached a couple of pics, would appreciate if anyone can. Can you feel a sticker underneath the zipp logos, or is that it in pic #2, small sticker with bar code and serial number? The single best tip I can give is for the heavier than standard weight Auto Rim bullets, such as the 250-255 SWC's and RF's. Casting these weight bullets soft or even.
• If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the by clicking the link above. You may have to before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. • Come on over and join in on the Trade at • VS are restricted to listing their ads to the S&S section or their VS sections. Ads listed in discussion areas are prohibited. Bad Company 2 Crack Free Download there.
Ever since the mid 1970's I've had a M1917 revolver of one sort or another. I started out with a Colt and owned four S&W's over the years. I finally picked up a S&W 625 with a four inch barrel in 1989. I really dispised the half-moon and full moon clips I was forced to use to get the cases out of the chambers after I fired the.45ACP ammo.
I had about 500.45 Auto Rim cases that I picked up in 1990 and put up until recently. Factory Remington.45AR came with a 230 grain lead bullet loaded to.45 ACP spec's. This did not endear me to round at first. I had purchased a copy of 'Pet Loads' from Wolfe Publishing and found that the author had made.455 Elly ammo from.45 AR brass by turning the rims thinner from the front of the rim. Sms Deliverer Enterprise Keygen Torrent.
He then loaded them up with 250 to 265 grain lead bullets on top of some stiff loads of smokeless powder. He was using these loads in a Colt New Service chambered in.455 Elly. I took that data and began using it in the.45 AR in my S&W 625.
What a difference. The 230 grain bullets had been mild, but fairly accurate.
These loads, using the.45 Keith LSW from the Lyman Mold, and sized to.454 were stout and very accurate. A solid hit on a #10 can of peanut butter litterally split the seam, peeled the lid back and sent a geyser of PB into the air. Yes, the cast bullet was a bit soft, like maybe 15 to 1 lead to tin. Anyhow, that load not only split that can but I punched a hole through an old car that had been abbandoned in that old quarry with another shot.
I also loaded up some LEE.45RNFP's in the.45 AR with similar results. Long range shooting at 100 yards at clay pigeons and tin cans was more fun, and required the use of kentucky windage at times to hit them. The best bullet I fired was a Lyman Gas Cheched SWC at 230 grains. For my money, give me the. Ezr8 Videolab Keygen Music. 45 AR over the.357 any day.
Anyone else have some info on the.45 AR to share? The single best tip I can give is for the heavier than standard weight Auto Rim bullets, such as the 250-255 SWC's and RF's. Casting these weight bullets soft or even of ACWW's gives significantly poorer accuracy in my AR revolvers than hardnesses approximating HTWW's. A hard bullet significantly reduces the skidding present in these revolvers due to the relatively high velocities at which the bullet strikes the forcing cone. The heavy inertia of the 250 grain bullets wants to ride over the rifling rather than turn with it. This is directly opposed to the slower velocity rifling engagement of an autoloader barrel, which doesn't have to 'crash' into the end of a separate barrel after jumping through a long chamber throat and barrel/cylinder gap. A hard bullet increases the grip the shallow rifling has on the bullet, substantially reducing skidding and improving accuracy.
A study of recovered bullets shows the differences quite plainly. Lighter bullets with less inertia, such as the various 185 grain target type SWC's of good bearing surface, may be shot of softer alloys with good results. I have been shooting my S&W model 25 45AutoRim since the mid-80s.
It is an extremely accurate revolver, and has been a constant hunting companion for years. My best hunting shot with it was a Belding Ground Squirrel shot in the neck at 60 paces, with witnesses! A lucky shot, but not outrageous, as this gun is routinely shot at 50yd bullseyes with great success. It has never had a jacketed round through it, nor a factory load- I standarized years ago on the 200gr RCBS SWC over 6.5gr Unique. A mild load, but, Oh, so accurate! I've recently acquired a Lyman 452423 single cav mold (238gr SWC) to try for a better hunting type load, with a HUGE meplat to transfer every bit of energy to the target.