I know a lot but it seems less every day...
Page from my 43rd edition lyman book. In their powder equivalents table ADI list AP 70n as being equivalent to unique and 4197 as approximating 2207 so you get the idea. It doesn't need a filler.
Go through any of the older books and you quickly see why 10 grains of unique is called the do it all load for cast bullets.
Last edited by Marty Henry; 07-07-2022 at 03:42 PM. Reason: Spell check and additions
Thanks @Marty Henry
Ap70n is ADI's version of Unique it is sold in the US as Universal standard cast bullet start load is 10 grains in .30 cal rifles with a 180-200 grain bullet,
should not need a filler if the velocity is iractic then a filler will help,
Detonations only happen with small powder charges of very slow burning powder, none have been with fast pistol powders but double loads are the cause
of blown guns, if using fast powder only load one case with powder and seat the bullet don't fill a loading block of cases with powder it will go wrong sooner
than later.
@Marty Henry. Got a page with 243 data?
Yep, guess what powder and weight of it goes behind a 95 grain bullet. Thats right 10 grains and its unique.
@Marty Henry. Bottom right corner.
I understand that pillow fluff is polyester and the same as what some reloaders refer to as "Dacron". It's main application is that the powder will have the same position up against the primer whether you shoot horizontal, up or down. Some powders like TB are "position insensitive" but I don't think that means it makes absolutely no difference to have it stacked consistently against the flash hole. I salvaged some from a torn pillow and into a larger jar than I'll ever finish as you need only a tiny amount to do the job, you don't stuff in as much as you can.
An itch ... is ... a desire to scratch
Looking at my 4th addition as well there are some different powders mentioned for the lighter 243 but the concepts the same. Your photo seems the same format as the later lyman manual of mine.
For reference here are the pages and some more 303.
Old manuals are a great resource the data was produced by doing not computer.
Reason I believed 2208 would be good for 303 cast is because of the bottom line.
Also looking at this. It has 26gn of h414 and 24gn of h4895 listed. To my knowledge 2208 having a burn rate in-between the two, one would assume 25g of 2208 would also work? Which I tried with good results.
IMHO super fast burners including TB don't need a filler. They work fine for subsonic loads and I have never had one that "failed to light".
I suspect the detonations that have occurred are due to double or tipple charging the super fast powder which is an understandable result. I would suggest visually checking all loads.
Use AP70. I use it for small game loads in most of my "big"" rifles.
Unique and Universal/AP70N was specifically designed for low powered loads. In a high velocity cartridge, such as the .303, .308 or .243 try 12-14 grains; will get you about 1600 fps depending on bullet weight. In the 30/06 I have gone up to 16 grains. I use it in the .223 as well, with 7.5 grains and a 55 grain bullet giving me 2000fps, which is my new ".22 Magnum"". (And its much more accurate than any real .22 Mag I ever met in person, and guess what, its actually cheaper.)
You will find that it is extremely accurate as a low powered load in a big cartridge. Every load you make will shoot well.
As for fillers..., I have experimented a fair bit with paper, cotton wool, cornmeal, semolina...all of this is to try and get consistent ignition and therefor velocity when using position sensitive powders. H4227 / 2205 was the main culprit. I found that fillers sort of worked, and also sort of didn't because they were not reliable. Four rounds would be bang on, and the fifth would fly wild. I tried folding paper different ways. I tried cotton wool and paper together. I tried semolina. There was confetti and cotton wool fluttering down in clouds.
The upshot was that any filler increased pressure a great deal, and sometimes it would spike higher or lower because the filler would move, or the powder would. And this was just taking them to the range. I remember that after I had taken a batch of cartridges back and forth to the range in the car, hiked it around hunting, reloading the cartridges it in and out of the rifle several times, I started to wonder what was going on inside the cases. Weeks later I dissassembled a few rounds and then found that in every single one of them the filler had failed to keep the powder in the right place and I just had a case full of filler and powder mixed together. So I gave it up.
Later I got some AP70N, and life became sensible again. AP70N is position sensitive to an extent, because I have tested it, but much less than some other powders, certainly less than 2205, and I can live with it.
The only filler I use now, is black powder. But that is a tale for another day.
Last edited by JohnDuxbury; 10-07-2022 at 01:14 PM.
yes and THAT tale needs telling.........PLEASE.
75/15/10 black powder matters
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