lots of air space in the cartridge using 700x in a rifle..
You got that right! No question about it. I was, at first, real worried about that air space in a long pistol cartridge.
for a handgun its different. i had to go thru many types of powders to get my 357 handi
to correctly handle a 125gr bullet. and i then started using this powder for different
grain bullets with excellent results. the powder i only use in mine for many bullet types and weights is IMR-4227
In this day of significant difficulty getting powder and primers, I was hoping that the 700X and Hodgen Clays I purchased, in large quantities and both readily available (at the time), would be a good start. Perhaps not. I have not tried the Clays. Now my problem is Small Pistol Primers...not available readily and in need!!!
you won't find much data in loading manuals for this powder for the 357 , but you can go to alot of reloading forums that speak of this powder for the 357 rifle. are you using pistol loading data?, that could be your problem, along with proper bullet seating.
I am using pistol data since I also own and shoot a 2.5" bbl Ruger SP101 in 357 Mag. I wanted the same load that would shoot in both rifle and pistol equally so I didn't get rifle cartridges mixed into the pistol and shoot my hand off. Safety First.
i think its in your reloading area...i dont think its your handi.....
I would agree. I was given the 185 cast grain bullets. Some were odd-ball 2nds. Most were 1st class. All were hand lubed. I did not check bullet diameters (thanks Montanan) and I set the bullets into the cases to Mfg. Max. Pistol length. Powder charge was for pistol so that the cartridges would shoot in the Ruger SP101 as well as the Handi.
mglvr44: I tacked the paper targets to cardboard.
I will have to check twist rate, other powders, lighter bullets, older whisky, younger women, and faster horses...
Thanks