Seismic Sam wrote:The fact that you went back to check that head means that you weren't 100% sure when you loaded up those 10 rounds of the charge weight, and trusted in the Dillon System rather than your own direct control and observation of the powder charges just before they went onto the cases.
This was the first 10 rounds I had ever loaded and must have spent 2 hours measuring and verifying that the powder drops were consistent at 4.5gr.
I can't emphasize enough the effort that went into (with anything I do) to make sure and validate that the powder drops were consistent and correct. I probably measure 3 times with 10 drops each to validate that I had 45gr, then measured anywhere from 10-20 individual drops, maybe overkill, but for my first time I wanted to know and be confident that I had it right. Today I loaded up the 45 setup to validate and confirm that I didn't make a mistake, I see nothing wrong with validating the drops were correct then and correct now. Each round was completed individually of the other, not using the full features of the press to process more than 1 at a time. Each round when finished was then confirmed with a case guage check and visually checked for any flaws.
Seismic Sam wrote:Secondly, there is the matter that you didn't stop after the 1st shot with the 45 and wonder WTF is wrong?? When you handload you should have the data memorized and/or written down, so when you pull the trigger and see the velocity on the chrono, you will know if it's in the ballpark or not. The 9mm data appears to be dead nuts on, and you should have known that from the get-go when you set up the chrono, so that series of shots should have told you that the M2 was working.
The first shot you knew was a 45 was 479 FPS, and that is WAAAYYY off the bottom end of any book I have for 4.5 grains of Bullseye. As a mater off fact, I have NO velocities in tables in any of my books that go lower than 600 FPS, much less 500 FPS. Found a few velocities in the mid 5's in the Lyman book, but that's about it. Hornady #9 shows a lead 230 grain RN at 770 for 4.5 grains of Bullseye, and other manuals show the velocity to be higher than that for other 230's with the same amount of powder.
Granted, as a noob, I did not validate or catch the discrepancy of the velocities on the first shot. I also should have fired some factory rounds to confirm that the chrono was at or close to factory specs to confirm it's proper operation. This will be done on the next outing. I appreciate the fact that you caught the low values and I didn't, at least I purchased the chrono to confirm my loads. My thought process at the time and in error was if I didn't see anything above 800 fps and no squibs which I felt confident I wouldn't have, then I failed to be alert to the fact the velocities were way low.
Seismic Sam wrote:Bottom line, you have acquired too much in the way of handloading equipment too quickly, and are trusting the equipment to keep your handloading safe. BIG MISTAKE. Then you bought very good chrono, which IS a good decision up front, but you started using it without knowing beforehand what the velocities were supposed to be, so you didn't know enough too know it was working properly to begin with, and that your 45 loads are hosed up in a fairly major way in the next string.
I've seen a lot of idiots come through here who were so damn dumb that if they screwed up their handloading and blew part of their head off, they'd be too damn stupid to know the difference and just keep on going. You are NOT that kind of person, which is why I'm still talking to you, but you are stacking one mistake or lack of the proper information on top of another, and if you keep this up this WILL catch up with you, and fairly fast and perhaps painfully. Go back to square 1 and start over.
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So my new game plan will be to load up another 10 rounds of the same recipe and go back to the range. The first group of shots will be with factory ammo to confirm the chrono is working properly. Then I'll fire up the test rounds and see what happens, so the question will be, if I get values in the same range, then is there a problem and what is causing it?
Using a Beam scale and is the same one used to setup the 9mm rounds so I know how to use it and set it up. Can or could there be an issue with the powder? No abnormalities were observed on the spent cases and encountered no feed issues. When I fired these rounds, I loaded a single round in the mag first and fired that to verify the round would fire, eject and lock the slide. I then loaded 2 rounds and repeated, I then loaded the remaining rounds and fired those without issue except for the low velocities observed. If I see the same results, do I fire all of them or stop if the chrono was ok with the factory rounds?