I have a strange little contribution here. I was loading FMJ in my 454 to shoot at silhouettes, but apparently humidity got to one case. I heard a plernk sound in there and I knew there was somethin' strange. Thankfully, the power from the small rifle primer was enough to drive the bullet flush with the forcing cone of the barrel and mash the powder charge behind it into a "pellet" for lack of a better word.... What was really irritating though, was once I opened the cylinder (the column of powder was between the cylinder and the barrel; imagine having a 45 cal column composed of 30gr. H110 falling apart into your gun and all over the table! :evil: A simple long, large bodied screw driver, carefully guided down to the bullet solved the problem. I don't know how that happened but somehow the humidity affected just that one round, the first round, out of a box of 100. It was an overcast day at the range when it happened, so, any better explanation out there? Moral: When it's cloudy, or more humid than usual, watch those cases!!! Patriot
AND YES!!!! When you load 230gr. FMJs at 1450 fps, it really knocks those steel targets around! ( Their av. distance is about 100-125 ft.) I've had a couple fall off that way...But they mostly put a good dent into the steel. After a while of doing this baby (Ruger SRH 454) at those plates, they kindly asked me to just stick with the pistol, or more preferably, the rifle range. I can understand that though, so don't scoff too much at them. I also did get alot of questions about what caliber that was, as everybody always stated that thing looks like a 45 cal. flame thrower.