Well, I had a very similar desire to load for both my New Model Blackhawk in .45 Colt and my .45LC Classic Carbine. The first one I got made the brass look like a football and blew out the side walls .025 or so every shot. I was a bit peeved, but luckily since I had purchased it from Davidson's, I activated their lifetime warranty process and returned it for a new one. This one did nearly the same thing, with the exception that it had a .010 high spot at the rear, so it would barely eject even on light loads. I literally only shot 4 bullets through it and wanted to return it, but Davidson's ask me to try to get H&R to review it first, so I sent it to them. They called me and said the barrel couldn't be fixed so I had to pick a different caliber. I was like NOT HAPPENING! So finally, they said the only thing they could do was return this gun to me as is, and I said do it. The final chapter was that I contacted my Davidson's dealer again and he said it was all or nothing. They would try to find one that was decent, but since it was a discontinued model by H&R that they couldn't keep swapping them. I got the 3rd one and FINALLY, all was good. This one is even tighter tolerance than my Blackhawk and shoots good and had the best wood of them all. Right after I received that one, Davidson's took the listing off their site. So moral is do what you can to check it, but there is a chance you'll get a big one. The good news was that after purchasing a Lee carbide deluxe die set, I was able to get them back into shape and I'm still shooting that brass. I couldn't get it to load using the Lee Loader, which is how I was loading then.