Hey Everybody,
After a very long break I am getting back into reloading and have forgotten a few things. I have a few questions just to make sure I keep everything safe.
I have an old 8x57 Turkish Mauser that is the primary rifle I reload for. I haven't shot this gun in probably two years, for the life of me I don't know why, but as I was going through some things today I realized that I have enough stuff to reload 200+ more cartridges.
Anyway, I have several of the 185 gr. Core Lokt bullets and IMR4350 powder. I am not sure where all my old load data is so I went searching the internet. I found a couple people with old Mausers loading this combo at 49 to 50 gr. of powder. I'm not so much worried about speed or knock down power, this is just a fun gun to shoot. Would I be safe loading something like 45 gr. of powder in this combo?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you cannot find the exact combo for the bullet weight and the powder you are using, you can use the amount of powder listed (same type of powder) for the next higher weight bullet, right?
Finally, I bought a lot of surplus ammo back in the day for this thing, I am thinking 196 gr. Yugo and 154 gr. Turk I think it was (I have it labeled at home, can't look now). A lot of them I thought had hard primers (which I later found out were likely okay, that I just needed a stiffer firing pin spring) so I pulled the bullets and saved the powder. For each cartridge I weighed the powder charge and found the average. I was able to find all this documentation today from before. My thoughts were, I could reload the matching bullet to the matching powder at a slightly lighter charge than what came originally in new Remington brass. For example, say the Turk Loads had a max of 41 gr. of powder, with the 154 gr. bullet. Would it be safe to put 37-41 gr. of the Turk powder in new Remington brass under the Turk 154 gr. bullet?
I know this is a lot of questions but I didn't realize how much I'd missed reloading my own ammo, and just want to make sure I get back into it safely.
Thanks for any insight!