The EAA 10mm with the steel frame is a tack driver. Only downside is it will throw brass in to the next county. Mine does not seem to care if I feed it short and week ammo.
Type: Posts; User: dan10mmman
The EAA 10mm with the steel frame is a tack driver. Only downside is it will throw brass in to the next county. Mine does not seem to care if I feed it short and week ammo.
In my experience Blue Dot is too slow of a powder for the 45. Dirty also. Try some Accurate 2 you will find that it is cleaner, more accurate, and consistent.
And depending on what gun you are going to run them in...…… Glocks in particular do not like bullets with shoulders on them. They tend to chip extractors. Conical or rounded work great
180 or 200gr the heavier bullets are loaded at a slower speed which will help reduce lead deposits in your barrel.
180gr Gold Dot powered by a healthy dose of Blue Dot. For practice, the same powder load behind 180gr X-treme from Wes Sage
You need to carry what you have...… In any pistol round, the heaviest solid bullet is recommended. In 9mm any hollow point you buy is designed for thin skinned {human} targets. To get enough...
I am really interested in what the group experience is on this. I have tried standard and some hot 45acp's and none of them will function the slide properly in the 460 conversions.
And working up new loads means more shooting.....for the WIN
First Question: What kind of powder and how much? If you are 10% under max load you should be fine.
I prefer 4198 to push the 405gr bullets. Consistently accurate.
A big Hello from the city of Des Moines WA
Thanks for the review. I am waiting to try some in 41mag
In my experience, I have found the Barnes X bullets to be most accurate, and excellent penetration
working up an accurate round for your gun and having the ability to reproduce them by the thousands is far superior than taking your chances with factory loads. Consistency is key to accuracy.
yeah, with almost twice as many shots before needing a reload
Beautiful, 10mm kicks ass