Hello everyone!
I had been reloading for various cartridges for several years and in my experience, more times than not, your best loads for a given gun, comes as a result of careful selection, measurement, and documenting of your test loads. There are however, some guns that are a little more susceptible to what you load them with and take a lot of patience to get there. Because of work and not enough time to do my reloading as meticulously as I used to do before, I tend to grab some "good" loads that I have already developed for a gun and try to use them with another gun (that does not always work that way).
I bought a S&W 629 with a 4" bbl (USED) (99% of my guns were bought new) that looks like the mountain gun version but it's not. When I saw this gun I fell in love with it and more so with the price ($425). The gun was looking like it was not used a lot or at least was kept in excellent looks. I did the cylinder check and noticed that it was not as tight as my S&W 629, 5" bbl gun and in addition to that it has a barely noticeable move of the cylinder when moved back and forth towards the bbl. I have read in many places that taht is not a good sign. My emotions were stronger than my left brain and I just went ahead and brought it home with me. So, I used my favorite 44 magnum loads that already work great in two other guns I have. The results: 6" group at 25 yards. It did not matter who shot it. I said a few things to my self (not body hear that) and I thought that was because of the cylinder play that I mentioned before. One day that I was reloading for my RSBHH-7.5" bbl for hunting, trying a low velocity load (13.2gr Blue Dot with 240gr Speer GDSP), I got the worst group ever with that revolver. For just curiosity, I fired some rounds with my S&W 629-4" and I was impressed! I can get groups of 1" to 2" consistantly. Now that made this gun to be in the front page and I started looking for other loads to see "how small cand it go...linbo rock?" Today I found an even better load: 18.9gr 2400 with the 240gr Speed GDSP. The average of 5 5-shot groups was 1.25" at 25 yds and one of the groupd had 4 shots in a one hole measuring less than half inch. That bits all my other 44 mag and 45 colt revolvers combined. I have to admit, these loads I am talking about were just coincidental. One thing for sure is that this gun is spending a lot more time with me now and I may consider to bring it along for deer hunt instead of my RSBHH 7.5" bbl that is quite heavy. My S&W 629-5" bbl stays home too because I don't have a holster for it yet (5") but that gun is also accurate with its own loads.
Question for you all: Do you have more than one "pet" load for each of your guns? What are your favorite components?
Thank you.