bobthemotorcycle
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2012
- Messages
- 396
- Reaction score
- 181
Can the Ruger Old Army shoot hard cast without issues. Does it simply use factory cast bullets in .46 cal? Those are hard cast aren't they?
It does not use factory cast bullets meant for modern .45 cal ammo. It needs a rebated base that slips into the chamber to ensure it’s seated properly by the loading lever. People have resized the bases of the bullets to work or have modified the chamber mouth to allow a .451-2” factory bullet to work. I can see the allure of that for sure. The way percussion revolvers work is that the projectile is oversized for the chamber and is press fit. It needs that friction to stay put, especially under recoil.Can the Ruger Old Army shoot hard cast without issues. Does it simply use factory cast bullets in .46 cal? Those are hard cast aren't they?
That would depend on the projectile used. The only one I’d pass on and chose a ball over is the traditional pointy conicals of the day. I’d put any one of my bullets up against a ball when looking for impressive terminal ballistics for hunting. I even have a wide meplat bullet that is shorter than a ball at 0.400” and weighs 170 grns. Not what I’d use for hunting with but it could be a real screamer that has added mass. Maybe one day I’ll look at max charges and see what I see. Really I just stick with my more accurate hunting charges, and will be making a universal bullet for both of my pistols that looks to weigh ~235 grns. A ball couldn’t even remotely come close to the terminal ballistics.Hard cast equals hard to load and can put strains on the gun when loading. Besides, my experience is that soft round balls allow larger charges, meaning higher velocity and more impressive terminal ballistics. Go with way works, don't try to reinvent the wheel.
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