I am a newbie at hand loading and have (finally) accumulated the equipment and supplies to start reloading soon. I anticipated loading .38 Specials to begin with and then later .357 Magnums after I developed some skill.
The first bullets I ordered were Remington 125gr. Semi-Jacketed Hollow Point:
http://www.midwayusa.com/viewProduct/default.aspx?productNumber=1601186739Not knowing any better, I anticipated that they would likely be exactly as that used in the Remington .38 Special 125gr. Semi-Jacketed Hollow Point ammo that I recently purchased locally. I also initially obtained .38 Special brass for reloading.
When I received the bullets, I noticed that the cannelure on the jacketed bullets was not in the same location as that used on the factory Remington .38 Special ammo. Later, after I obtained some .357 Magnum brass, I then realized that these bullets were designed for .357 Mag not .38 Special.
On the following photo (sorry for the blurriness) the items shown, left to right:
A. Remington factory .38 Special ammo 125 gr Semi-Jacketed Hollow Point.
B. Remington factory bullet 125 gr Semi-Jacketed Hollow Point purchased from MidwayUSA.
C. Example of .38 Special case with bullet at a specification of 1.550" overall length.
D. Example of .357 Magnum case with bullet at a specification of 1.590" overall length.
E. Example of .38 Special with Rainier LeadSafe Bullet (no cannelure).
F. Example of .357 Magnum with Rainier LeadSafe Bullet (no cannelure).
Questions:
1. Can these Remington bullets with the higher placed cannelure be used with .38 Special loads?
2. If used with .38 Specials, should the bullet placement be lowered to make use of the cannelure or should the cannelure be ignored?
3. Wouldn't lowering the bullet placement cause unknown changed in pressures?
I am kind of disappointed that the cannelure location is not specified when purchasing as meant for .357 Magnum or .38 Special. I may avoid buying them in the future with cannelures.
The Rainier LeadSafe Bullets, I ordered later, don't have cannelures, load using lead bullet loading data and are also more economical. They are lead swaged bullets, not cast lead, and are electroplated copper instead of jacketed. The manufacturer recommends using cast lead bullet loading data.
http://www.rainierballistics.com