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This article is for informational purposes only. Suthenboy is not a credentialed expert. Do not attempt any of these activities without first consulting an expert or a manual published by accredited experts or manufacturers.
Get ready to start loading!
Sizing
In a standard die set the first die is the sizing die. When firing a brass case expands and seals off the gun’s chamber like a gasket. It bounces back after the pressure drops but not all the way back to original size so the first thing to be done is to size it back to specifications. With a straight wall case carbide die this is fairly simple. Screw the die into the press until it touches the shell holder with the press in the up position then back it off about half of a turn. Make sure the pin of the center punch extends past the opening of the die but the stem of the punch does not. Place the case in the shell holder and pull the press handle a full stroke. If you meet solid resistance before the stroke is complete stop and back the die off a little bit. The die will size the case to specs and the center punch in the die will decap (remove the spent primer) the case. Run all of your cases through the die.
With shouldered cases you must first lightly lubricate them. I use a lubed Q-tip to swab the inside of the case neck. I put a drop or so in the palm of my hand then line 6 to 8 cases in the palm of one hand. I put my hands together and rub them back and forth in a hand-warming style motion until the lube is evenly distributed on all of the cases. This method goes pretty fast. Make sure the lube is light or the excess lube will create a ripple like surface on the brass, ruining it. A trace amount is all that is needed.
Some rifle die sets will have two sizing dies, one for sizing the neck and the other for sizing the body, making sizing a two-step process. I prefer the one step dies but I am not a benchrest shooter.
After sizing the cases must be cleaned. As I mentioned the brass case expands during firing and becomes a brass gasket to seal off the chamber. To do this it must expand and grip the walls of the chamber. If there is lube on the case you would have the same effect as if you oiled your brakes. The bolt of the gun cannot hold the pressure. It is not designed to. It is the brass case gripping the walls of the chamber that holds the pressure. If the brass ruptures or cannot grip you may find tens of thousands of pounds of pressure escaping in your direction. This can ruin your day. Clean your cases well.
Priming
Various formulations (lead styphnate, antimony sulfide, barium nitrate plus secret ingredients depending on the manufacturer) are used for priming material but the first thing to know about all of them is that they are extremely sensitive to decomposition. The primary explosive in primers must be sensitive enough to ignite upon being struck by the gun’s firing pin. This means these formulations are much less stable than the secondary incindiary material – the gunpowder. You should never touch primers with your fingers. Even trace amounts of oils, water or salt from your fingers can cause the priming material to become inert. Touch a primer and you end up with a dud round or worse, delayed ignition. I keep tweezers on hand at all times to manipulate loose primers. Also, that instability means you should never subject primers to shock or heat. If you have one go off you will be surprised how much bang one of those tiny caps have.
*Priming material is a very powerful explosive. Historically primers were assembled in small, one person sheds surrounded by sandbags. Only women were hired to do this tedious job because women can sit comfortably and focus for long periods of time much easier than narrow hipped men can. Thankfully today they are manufactured in unmanned facilities by remote control.
Make certain that you have the proper primer for your load. Small differences in primer operation make big differences in how the gunpowder burns. Never use magnum primers for standard loads. There are:
Small pistol
Small pistol magnum
Large pistol
Large pistol magnum
Small rifle
Small rifle magnum
Large rifle
Large rifle magnum
Various specialized formulations such as military primers
Again, always make sure your primer matches the load you are making.
Priming tools, either hand squeezed or lever operated, use a small plunger to press the primer into the case’s primer pocket. In both cases very little practice is needed to get the feel of properly seating a primer. I used to sit in front of the television with 500 or 1000 batches of brass and do the operation almost entirely by feel while watching TV. Make sure the mouth of the case is facing away from you, other people, pets and especially from your store of other primers or gunpowder. Press the primer in and then after each one run your finger over the primer to make sure it is properly seated. It should feel just slightly below the base of the case. If it is not in far enough it will cause revolver’s cylinders to jam as the primer will rub against the frame and in rare cases could be set off in semi-autos by being struck by the slide upon feeding. You don’t want to have one go off before it is fully chambered. Make sure they are fully seated.
Another safety tip: If you try to fire a round and you only get a click DO NOT IMMEDIATELY OPEN THE GUN AND REMOVE THE DUD ROUND. Keep the gun pointed in a safe direction and wait for half a minute or so. It is possible to have a hang fire, that is delayed ignition. Don’t be this guy:
Trimming and Flaring
Cases can stretch with repeated use but with pistol cases I have never found them to stretch excessively. They work harden before that happens. With longer rifle cases the stretching can be greater and affect accuracy. Use your micrometer to check for stretching and either discard or trim cases back to specifications. I have never felt a great need to do this except for some rifle cases. Case trimmers are relatively cheap and easy to use but you can get by without one.
It is worth the investment to buy a universal flaring die but most die sets have a flaring function. You want to flare the case the least amount possible as it will work harden the mouth of the case and after a few uses the mouth can split upon firing.
Put a case in the shell holder and pull your press handle all the way down with no die in it. Now screw the die in and keep screwing until you feel very slight resistance. Turn the die in ¼ to ½ more turn but not so much that it starts moving the press handle. Take the case out and try to put a bullet in the mouth of the case with your fingers. If the base of the bullet clears the mouth of the case you are good. Lock the die in place with the lock ring and run all of your cases through that die. If not then screw the die in ¼ turns and put the case back in the die. Continue doing this until the base of the bullet fits into the mouth without catching on the edge of it. This allows you to seat bullets without crushing the edges of the case mouth.
Charging the cases
Obviously charging the case with gunpowder is the most critical step in the process. Great care must be taken.
I am going to hit the high points here and I will write an article later on just gunpowder. It is a subject with a lot of information and I don’t want anyone lapsing into a coma while trying to slog through it.
Gunpowder does not explode. It burns. Under confinement it burns rapidly. If you pour a little powder out on a safe surface and ignite it will make a sputtering flame for a few seconds. Under pressure or in confinement it burns much more rapidly. Ideally we want the powder to finish burning just as the bullet leaves the muzzle. We don’t want it to finish burning before the bullet leaves the muzzle because that means pressure is dropping and the bullet slowing before it leaves the gun. If it doesn’t finish burning until after the bullet leaves we end up with a lot of muzzle flash and wasted powder.
Powders come in three types: ball, tube and flake. The powder burns on the surface so by changing the surface area/volume the rate of burn can be controlled. Obviously the ball powders are the slowest burners as a sphere has the lowest surface area/volume possible. Their burning rate is adjusted by changing the sizes of the spheres. Next are the tube powders. These grains are tiny tubes and these offer the greatest variability. They have different outside diameters, inside diameters and lengths. The fastest powders, used in shotguns and pistols, are the flake powders. These are tiny little sheets that have the greatest surface area/volume.
Each of these offers different advantages. Ball powders can be measured very accurately because there is little variability in the number of balls that can fit in your measure. Tube powders measure reasonably well but as I have mentioned before the mechanics of your powder dispenser may chop some of the tubes changing the burning rate of some of the grains. This variability is small enough that the normal shooter wont notice but long range bench rest shooters generally use methods of measure that don’t damage the grains such as powder tricklers that measure powder by weight instead of volume. Flake powders are the most difficult to measure accurately but since they are used in pistol and shotgun (short range) this doesn’t present much of a problem.
If you are measuring powder with a dipper… pour about a half of a pound of powder into a glass bowl that does not have corners inside. When scooping the powder with the dipper you want to start at one side of the bowl and make a sweeping motion from one side of the bowl along the inside surface all the way to the other side keeping contact with the bowl the whole time. Try to scoop using the same motion and speed each time. Set your scale for the desired amount of powder and then measure about five consecutive scoops and see how consistent the amounts are and how close they are to your desired amount. If a scoop comes up heaping with powder put it back in the bowl. Don’t try to adjust a scoop by leveling powder off of the top or adding to it. Consistent motion equals consistent measure. If you let the amount of the powder in the bowl get too low it will start scooping differently so keep the amount of powder in the bowl consistent.
With powder dispensers put about half of a pound of powder in the hopper. Set the can of powder with the lid on it near the powder dispenser. Make sure it is the only can of powder on the table. Do not move that can until you are finished dispensing and you have poured the hopper back into the can.
I say again: SET THE CAN OF POWDER NEAR THE DISPENSER, MAKE SURE IT IS THE ONLY CAN ON THE TABLE AND DO NOT PUT THAT CAN AWAY UNTIL ALL OF THE EXTRA POWDER IS BACK IN THE CAN. This way if you take a break or leave powder in the hopper for next time you will always know exactly what powder is in the hopper. If you fail to do this never try to remember or guess which powder is in the hopper. You will have to dispose of it. I know someone who did this. He guessed it was Unique powder, it turned out to be Bullseye, a much faster powder. He blew his gun up and escaped injury by the skin of his teeth.
Set your scale for the desired amount. Set your dispenser over the amount you are aiming for. Dispense one charge and weight it. Adjust your dispenser down and weight again. Keep doing this until you hit the target load. Firmly set the charger adjustment with the lock ring or set screw. Now dispense about five charges and weigh each one. If it consistently hits within one to two tenths of a grain of the target load you are ready to go.
Charge each case and set them in the loading block as you go.
When you are finished all of the cases in the loading block will be standing close together and upright. As with the dipper method try to keep your hopper filled consistently. Don’t run it dry or near the end it will measure differently.
STAND UP AND LOOK DIRECTLY DOWN INTO THE MOUTHS OF ALL OF THE CASES. USE A FLASHLIGHT AND SHINE IT DOWN SO THAT YOU CAN CLEARLY SEE ALL OF THE POWDER IN THE CASES. If one of the cases didn’t charge, got double charged or has more than the slightest variation in charge it will jump right out at you. You will see it easily. Pour that charge back into the hopper and recharge it.
Now randomly choose three to five charges from one end of the loading block to the other and weigh them. Pour the weighed charges back into the hopper and recharge the cases. Check again with the flashlight.
You are now ready to start seating bullets.
*A revolver round that does not get charged is very dangerous. The power of the primer is enough to push the bullet partway down the barrel. If you are firing rapidly it is possible that you may fire another round while that bullet is lodged in the barrel. This will result in a catastrophic failure of your gun and likely serious injury or death for you. In a semi-auto of course the gun wont feed and you will know something is seriously wrong.
Use the flashlight method when charging. Make safety your religion.
Seating Bullets
While your cases are still in the loading block use your fingers to press a bullet base down firmly and as straight as you can into each case. Because the cases are flared this should be an easy and quick operation. The bullets should stick enough that they don’t wobble around and fall out when you handle the cases. Be careful not to jostle things around or powder could splash from one case to another – firm flat surface and press straight down. Any jostling or spilled powder and you must dump them all out and start the charging process over.
The seating die will both seat the bullet and crimp the case around it. Adjusting both of its functions can be a difficult puzzle so I will give you the key.
1. Put one of the cases with a bullet in the mouth into the press with no die and pull the handle all the way down.
2. On the top of the die unscrew the seating adjustment most of the way out.
3. Screw the die in the press until it goes down most of the way over the case but you still feel no resistance.
4. On the top of the die screw the seating adjustment down until you feel it contact the bullet.
5. Pull the press handle up a bit and then screw the seating adjustment down 4 or 5 turns.
6. Pull the press handle down all the way. You will feel it begin to press the bullet into the case.
7. Raise the press handle again and see how far you pressed the bullet in.
8. Repeat this process several times and use your micrometer if you need to to measure the loaded round until it is at proper seating depth. If your bullet has a cannelure or a crimp groove this is easy to do by eye. The bullet should be seated to the proper depth but you can still see the case mouth flared around the bullet.
9. Unscrew the seating adjustment most of the way out then pull the press handle all the way down.
10. Screw the die down until you feel resistance. That resistance is the crimping ring inside the die contacting the case.
11. Move the press handle up a bit and screw the die in ¼ to ½ turn and then press the case back into it. Then examine the case. Continue this until you observer a firm crimp around the bullet but not enough to crush it.
12. You are now at proper crimping depth but the seating adjustment is not contacting the bullet. Lock the die in place using it’s lock ring.
13. With the cartridge still in the die screw the seating adjustment down until you feel it contact the bullet. Make sure it is screwed down firmly and then using it’s lock ring lock it in place.
Your die is now properly adjusted and you can go to town. Run all of the cases through the die examining each as it comes out. Congratulations! you have just loaded a batch of safe, reliable ammunition at a small fraction of the cost of off of the shelf centerfire ammunition.
*Gunpowder burn rate is strongly affected by amount of confinement. If you seat the bullets too deeply it will cause the powder to burn more quickly, raising pressure. Get yourself one of these: https://www.midwayusa.com/product/685703/rcbs-powr-pull-impact-bullet-puller-kit
Occasionally while adjusting your seating die you may over-seat one and need to remove it. That little gem will take it back out for you without damaging the bullet.
*When you are loading if you become tired, stop. You must be attentive and focused throughout the process. Don’t push it. This is not an emergency and the stuff wont run away. It will be there when you are rested and ready to load again.
Next up: components
If you are still awake, jump into the comments.
Bonus: Hatcher’s Notebook is hands down the best technical book on ballistics ever written. It is in the public domain and you can download it as a free .pdf from Glibs, or acquire it in other formats here.
Jeebus. That video is horrifying.
For some reason, it reminded me that I have twice found a round in the chamber when I was positive I had cleared it, and was habitually racking the bolt/slide before putting the gun in its case. It is one of the few times I have literally had chills, as in the hairs on my arm stood up. Both times.
I have never had an actual hang-fire but every time I have had a ‘click’ I just held the gun in place and waited a minute or so. Yeah, that video is pretty terrifying. It is pretty obvious from the way he shoots and handles the gun that he has no idea what he is doing.
Luckiest. Guy. That. Ever. Lived.
That was McCain? Makes sense, I guess.
I remember getting the lecture about hang-fires when we were shooting .22’s back in Boy Scouts. There was one where the kid pulled the trigger, and followed the proper procedure (setting the gun down pointing down range, raising hand to get the attention of the adult). The adult gets to the kid, asks what’s wrong, and at that point the gun fired. We were all a lot more careful after that.
That guy almost won a Darwin Award.
I have some rifles whose magazine followers don’t stop the bolt when the magazine is empty (Mosin-Nagants and Lee-Enfields). If I’m not sure if I counted correctly while shooting, I wait after the last click before opening the bolt just in case.
And who is stupid enough to look down the barrel of a loaded gun?
Did I ever tell you about marrying my second wife?
I am in the same boat. I wouldn’t call it luck. More like wisdom.
Third wife was wisdom. Second wife was stupidity. First wife was hormones.
I suppose this is progress.
Oh, and nice article! Great choice of video.
Damn, you tried 3 times?
I did my first marriage for 23 years and after getting out of that, decided that marriage was not for guys that wanted to have any say in how their lives would go.
Full disclosure, I have zero interest in leaving my wife. I have a friend who recently divorced, and he’s having a ball playing the field. When I think about a.) dating, and b.) getting married a second time, I just can’t picture it. I think if, God forbid, we got divorced, I might casually date here and there but mostly I’d just do my own thing. The prospect of going through all that shit again makes me tired just thinking about it.
Third one (SP) has been perfection. I’m a slow learner.
I married the worst woman in the world and the best woman in the world. Fortunately in the right order.
“I might casually date here and there but mostly I’d just do my own thing. ”
That is me now. Don’t get me wrong. After my divorce I did want to find somebody, but then reality hit me. At my age if they are single and not fugly, broke, or have 12 kids, it is because they are batshit crazy. I have met plenty of women that had their act together – at first glance – only to discover they are insane or just great at hiding their dysfunctions.
I’m in the same boat as Naptown Bill. Not that I’d ever leave Mrs trshmnstr, but if something happened and I found myself single, I’d probably do what my dad did… spend a shit ton of time and money doing whatever the hell I want.
I can cook, I clean, can do my laundry, and I make great money, have no debt, am healthy and in great shape for a guy that’s 55, so the one and only thing I need a woman for is…
Seriously. I have recently started wondering that the people I knew that joked you paid prostitutes not for sex but to leave might not have had the whole idea right.
Third one (SP) has been perfection.
BEHOLD! The magical power of a rusty tin can lid collection.
I mean, gee, my darling OMWC, you say the sweetest things.
Be careful SP he is playing you!
All he wants is nookie…
Isn’t that all any of us want?
Some of us have been unlucky enough to look down the barrel of a loaded gun that was being held by a police officer…
I never had that experience. I had one put his hand on his gun for no reason that I could see.
“There is no need for that. Put that back in your pants and zip it up.”
Five minutes later he was joking around with me. He pulled me over for an inspection sticker FFS. Bad part of town, young cop, he was scared.
I have found that being scared often makes people do stupid shit. They either overcompensate to hide it and do something dumb, or they simply overreact and do something dumb. And some professions, by the very virtue that they way too often attract the people least mentally aligned for the authority, this can be a real deadly deal.
You are right about that.
I put him at ease by saying that my inspection sticker was good. He said no, it expired in 10/1. I was standing by the driver’s door and said “You are looking at it from the wrong side. It’s got ten years left on it.”
You get away with ten years before the state hassles you again?
That’s the joke. Inspection stickers here, at that time, were only good for a year.
Ah.
I’ve heard of states where ‘inspection’ was effectively permanant, so I don’t know what any given place does for that.
California does not have inspection stickers. One of life’s great mysteries.
This was in the early 00’s, me and a co-worker were packing envelopes for a business mailing that was set to go out. The office was sub-leased from another office. The primary office didn’t check to see if we were still in, and turned on the alarm system without telling us. In the far East side suburbs of Cleveland, officer friendly decided to patrol the building with gun drawn and at a ready position. When he saw me and my co-worker (getting ready to head out), he aimed at us. We calmly explained that we worked there, and were going to pull out business cards to show him. After we showed him those, he put the pistol away, and warned us that we shouldn’t be in our office late…
” warned us that we shouldn’t be in our office late”
I’ll work as late as I want to, asshole.
And that’s when I feared for my life, and had to make sure I made it home safely.
/Good Shoot
“In the far East side suburbs of Cleveland, officer friendly decided to patrol the building with gun drawn and at a ready position”
Yeah, I see your problem right there..
Long story, but been there and watched the cop go ahead a shoot my buddy. He survived, but it was not good.
I’ve aimed a loaded gun at several people (Iraqi Army). Didn’t like that feeling and was quite relieved they decided against doing anything stupid.
Somehow, I never have missed one, but I always stick my finger in there and get someone else to verify it’s empty before I release it.
I also announce to everyone that it’s loaded when I put my carry piece back together.
I’m scared to do it any other way.
This is the classic. Sadly, he survived.
Posted without comment.
I highly recommend anyone who is interested in guns read Hatcher’s Notebook. It is a fascinating and educational read.
I thank SP for making it available here. It is worth every minute you spend on it.
Can confirm.
I figured that you had read it already.
Awesome series Suthen.
I shoot enough that reloading would be worth it, but I don’t know if I can justify the expense to my CFO.
It seems like a very interesting hobby, and part of me really would like to learn.
Great summary of the process. Can we make this series available long term somehow, say by download or something? It’s a great work on reloading for beginners.
Yes. If Suthenboy has no objections, I can bundle up the series in a single .pdf when it’s done and make it available to download.
That would be great! Then I can print it and read it in my bat cave like a civilized person.
I mistakenly bought 100 rounds of Winchester 38 special 130 grain FMJ. Does anybody want them? Email me. moriah at moriahjovan dot com or DM me on Twitter.
You dont have a 38?
Yeah, it seems like she needs to “mistakenly” buy a 38 now.
HAH HAH HAH!
It did occur to me. It’s still occurring to me.
Why not a .357?
This
I have a box of .357 Sig lying around, someone who doesn’t know the difference between that and .357 Mag gave it to Mrs. Animal for Christmas a while back. I’ve been debating just buying a .357 Sig gun to shoot it up.
Sounds like a good reason to get one.
The husband would raise an eyebrow at me, tbh.
“It just followed me home, honey!”
“Oh, that ol’ thing? Had it forever.”
Only works for long guns, but a classic trick is to bring the new rifle/shotgun home with a lampshade stuck on the barrel and an old electrical cord taped to the stock. “Look, hon,” you say, “I found this old gun made into a floor lamp for $20. I’m going to take it down to the workshop, see if I can get it working somehow.”
“You bought another one? How many rifles do you need?!”
*shuffles pile of rifles around*
“What new rifle?”
My greatest fear is that one day I will die and my wife will sell my guns for what I told her I paid for them.
I have the same fear with tools
“Oh, shit, I’ve had that gun…three, mebbe four years. Got that a long time ago.”
What did you intend to buy?
380, for a little purse pistol I have. I’m pretty much ignernt and let the salesguy tell me there wasn’t such a beast. I didn’t even need the things because I had some already. I overestimated how much I would shoot that day.
Wait, you can’t take it back and exchange it?
Walmart. No.
Well, that answers my question too then.
What sort of ammo salesmen hasn’t heard of a 380?
Walmart.
I was in a rush, late to my date with my instructor, thought I could pop by and just buy some.
Get a 38 and burn some gunpowder. I’d offer to buy it from you but I am awash in 38’s.
Thanks. I appreciate it.
Aside: My little 380 has a kick to it.
J frame S&W or Ruger revolver in 22LR is a perfect replacement if you find 380 a little heavy on the recoil. If you dont mind the coin get a laser sight.
Most 380s are straight blowback which can make the felt recoil disproportionately heavy. I have a couple of Walther PPKs, one with an aluminum frame, and I swear they recoil heavier than my 1911 45’s.
My SA 911 shoots like a dream with Fiocchi 95 grn bullets. The 99 grn HSTs are not fun to shoot. Very noticeable difference.
As Sean mentions, ammunition matters. But in terms of felt recoil and accuracy.
My wife and I tried three or four different brands and settled on Federal American Eagle for practice rounds.
Which one do you have? Someone near and dear to me uses an AMT Backup.
I can’t get enough of this. Keep them coming!
^^^ Same here
Me three.
Thanks, Suthen.
Sessions is absolutely worthless, he had a chance to reform the JD after it was politicized under the previous administrations and he completely monkeyed it up. If he was an honorable man (he isn’t) he’d resign because his boss doesn’t want him there.
What the hell happened with the threading? Site must have glitched.
and he completely monkeyed it up.
That’s racist!
Outstanding article, Suthen. I liked the fact you emphasized things like keeping the can with the powder you’re using, checking the charged brass before seating the bullet. Important stuff that can be easily overlooked.
I was loading .270 Winc one time with a powder I was unfamiliar with and it seemed like the loads were compressed. After a couple of rounds I decided I wasn’t man enough to know what I was doing, threw away the loaded ones and changed to a known powder listed in the manual. When in doubt, stop doing what you’re doing and consult with someone.
I clean my brass before decapping. Dirty brass can lead to sticking in the die. Also I use a lube pad but roll them across but essentially the same as your method.
When I wrote this up I was afraid it was too tedious and technical, that it would just bore the hell out of anyone that tried to read it. I am flattered that it has gotten good reviews.
I started re-reading Hatchers and realize just how bad my writing is. I am working on that.
The quality of technical writing is judged by whether someone can follow your instructions and duplicate it. I think you’re doing fine.
I am no longer a gun owner and have no plans to try reloading. But I read this all the way through because it’s interesting. This is the kind of thing that really adds to the Glibs site.
Thank you Kevin.
I am really flattered.
You did a terrific job on the series, Suthen. Thank you for taking the time to write it.
I’ve found that the folks here tend to be curious and interested in subjects, or at least can use it as a springboard for discussion. I really encourage y’all to make a submission, you’ll find the commentariat to be quite supportive and interested if it is something you are passionate about.
Not boring at all, very interesting and easy to follow and understand.
Suthen, your writing is just fine. And I think Animal’s idea above about making a downloadable series is a good idea.
Now that Suthen thanked us I can go off topic…
Well, let me thank him for writing this piece first as it is interesting as hell.
Anyway, why is this guy still AG?
We have an AG?
You got me there man. 🙁
Because he’s an angel, duh.
The media is in full spin mode on this. The Washington Post calls Trump’s claims “unfounded.” And mocks the Daily Caller story which relied on two unnamed sources. Then goes on to say:
But this is a routine case of lying by omission. In fact:
https://dailycaller.com/2018/08/29/fbi-refuses-disclose-intelligence-community-inspector-general/
“they were “fairly confident” that there wasn’t an intrusion.”
Bull-fuckin’-shit. It is a 100% certainty that the Russians and the Chinese had every damned email she sent or received.
A determination of fairly condident doesn’t fill me with confidence.
Since her homebrewer server broke in the news, I have assumed the Russians, Chinese, and Israelis, and possibly the Norks and who knows who else, had realtime access to her emails. I mean, the US SecState has got to be one of the top five cyberespionage targets in the entire world; the odds that multiple intelligence agencies weren’t pulling a train on it are microscopic.
Yeah, note how aggressive the Russians were until Kerry took over? How did they know that if they annexed Crimea, the U.S. and the UK would do nothing?
Sessions is either completely brilliant and luring the Deep State to sleep right before he indicts all their asses – or a complete incompetent. I’m guessing the second thing but I can dream.
This is good stuff. I’ve been reloading for a short time and it is always good to have a little refresher. So many little steps that can go wrong, and I’m always finding new ways that I can really screw up. Good point about taking a break if you are tired. Don’t rush. Take a break.
Well done southen. I appreciate the effort.
I have never experienced a hang fire, but I know that if I ever did, what the guy in the video did is exactly wrong.
Matter of fact, the only time to look down a barrel is when it’s no longer mounted to a receiver and you eyeballs are at the breech end.
^Truth. I’ve seen Elmer Fudd enough times to know there’s nothing good that comes of looking down the business end of a gun.
Yeah, unless I disassembled the weapon to clean it, I am never, ever, lining up the barrel with any part of my or someone else’s body. Just paranoid about safety that way.
^^THIS X1000^^
I have taught my kids and wife the four rules before they were taught how to shoot and freak out at gun stores when people carelessly point pistols wherever.
I bought Jr. A bb gun when he was 3 years old and taught him the 4 rules. Every time he broke one I took it away for a few days and locked it up. He loved that gun so I only had to take it away a gew times before he had a firm grasp of what was expected of him.
Nice job. Exactly right.
That’s a good strategy
For awhile I couldn’t take that kid anywhere without him bringing his gun.
https://imgur.com/aee8AOZ
He shot the fish?
It made a furtive motion.
It was acting fishy…
I suppose now we’re going get a bunch of crappie puns.
Why carp about it, Hyperbole?
We need to establish a bass-line for this sort of thing.
Visiting the range in Texas they gave a safe handling test because I had no evidence of having worked with handguns before. The first part of the test involved setting the revolver on the counter and seeing what I did with it. When my first action was to keep it pointed at the wall and open the cylinder to check the load, I passed. I was horrified when the guy explained that there were idiots who thought nothing of waving the things around, confident that there was no way it could possibly be loaded.
For the record, it wasn’t, but I didn’t know that until I got it open.
This is the part people seem to have trouble with.
All guns are loaded.
I feel slightly more comfortable when there is a chamber flag in the pistol. But yes every gun is loaded, always, always, always.
My grandfather drilled it into me when I was knee high “There are a lot of people in the ground who were shot by unloaded guns.”
See RC at comment #1.
Check. Double check. Triple check.
I first learned the lesson about unloaded v loaded guns from Pater Dean as a wee tad. He was going to take us out to shoot our BB guns. I got all excited and started loading the BBs before we got to the “range”. I went back into the house, and Bro Dean got to go with Pater to shoot, while I sat at home. And cried.
Just as a matter of principle, I’m vehemently opposed to paintball (SLD, for me and mine – you do what you want). They learned early that they couldn’t even point toy guns at people, because they would be using real ones their whole lives.
I’ve looked down barrels that were still attached to receivers; however, I personally checked and double checked that they were unloaded and the bolts were either open or removed.
Hang fires scare the shit out of me and that video turned my stomach. That guy should’ve gone down a bought a lottery ticket right afterward ’cause that was his lucky day.
Dude needed to immediately hand that gun to an adult and then go get “Tho Shalt Not Look Down The Barrel” tattooed on his forearms. And put that hat in a Lexan case right above his gun safe. And hand the keys to someone smarter.
I think he used up all of his luck. That really is some of the worst dumbassery I have ever seen.
I still can’t believe someone actually fucking did that.
It’s hard to understand. I mean, he was wearing the yellow safety vest & everything.
I’ll stick to this video.
Great article Suthen, almost convinces me I could reload.
Except for the initial cost, someplace to do it and I’m
a “good enuff” kinda of guy. But smart enough to know
“good enuff” isn’t.
Meh. You could do it. Take your time, pay attention to detail and if you get tired quit and do something else.
I make my bullet lube with paraffin and beeswax. The smell of that and burned powder when I shoot is almost better than…well. It is my second favorite smell. Reloading has allowed me to burn a lot of gunpowder, beeswax and paraffin.
Patience is not my strong suit, nor is accuracy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_VrFV5r8cs0
Suthenboy, thanks for the series of articles.
While I have no interest in reloading at this point, retirement is not that far off in the future. That means more time to shoot and less time to buy. So reloading may become important at that time. Understanding the fundamentals helps to determine what I need to plan for.
less
timemoney tobuyspend.Although buying time is always a priority.
Plinketss star wars review
https://youtu.be/f83D18xL7VE
That was posted yesterday. I spend my entire lunch hour watching it.
The worst thing anout Star Wars’ decline to me is that these won’t come out as often.
I’ve watched his reviews of the 3 prequels several times. Makes me laugh, then makes me angry.
I saw the latest shitty movie on a plane. Tried to make is sciency while ignoring science.
OT: Check this out you clowns.
https://pacedrink.com/
I’m thinking placebo effect.
I love how they link to scientific studies that don’t address their claims in the slightest.
Totes legit right there.
The bottom right section of the site still has the template left in place.
whoops.
There is a career opening for Webmaster, clearly they need one.
I’ve had a few hang fires with cheap Winchester shotgun ammo from Walmart. I won’t buy it anymore. Holding the gun for a minute wondering if it’s going to fire and then opening the breech, hoping it still won’t go off is worth saving five bucks.
“isn’t” worth saving five bucks.
Good series, Suthen!
On the bright side, if you had shot yourself in the head, you could be a congresswoman from Arizona.
Weekend at Bernies III
Almost on Topic
Florida sheriff backs Uber driver who killed ‘goofball’
(And thanks for an interesting series! I’ve read them all even though I don’t shoot enough to even consider hand loading.)
Appears to be a Good shoot. Pull in front of someone like that, I think it safe to assume they mean u bodily harm
“Mr Boek had been “stalking” his girlfriend outside a bar, the sheriff said.
When she went outside the pub to help a drunk friend get into an Uber to leave, Mr Boek mistakenly thought she was in the car, said the sheriff.
The boyfriend set off in pursuit, sending “explosive” text messages to her along the way, added the sheriff.
After the shooting Mr Westlake called 911 and attempted to perform CPR.”
Yep. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Identity politics uber alles.
https://pjmedia.com/parenting/ohio-students-asked-which-victim-group-theyd-vote-off-a-spaceship-fleeing-a-dying-earth/
I can only leave four of them?
We’ll keep the niggers and the Chinks but we don’t want the Irish.
But I know how to make mead. Isn’t that worth saving?
I work in IT, have a NukE degree and can make beer. I am gold!
True. As a shitlord, once you’re killed you can supply meat to the rest of the ship for at least a week or two.
Well. Engineer; CompSci/Physics; 37 patents; make wine, mead, cider, and a nice sour ale.
It was the Irish thing I was worried about.
So do all of the brewers here have a bit of the Mick in them?
/American Mutt
Funny you mention, but yeah, through my maternal grandfather.
Well, that makes four of us. I think the science is settled.
Nope, English/German
My last name is common amongst Irish immigrants to England, so probably.
I also assume you naturally soaked up the ability to grow corn.
maybe
“constant fear of the earth burning up because of Hummers.”
Now blowjobs cause global warming?
This is getting out of hand. So to speak.
It doesn’t matter because I’m gonna “watch this” that spaceship into an asteroid ASAP.
33 y/o native american manager, that does not speak engilsh?!? Maybe she’s mute. I don’t have any other explanation for that person.
oh oh another riff
Do you need a degree in Native American management to learn how to properly deal with those types of people?
From the Department of Hyperbole:
https://freebeacon.com/politics/illinois-dem-trump-osama-bin-laden-tremendous-amount-common/
They both spit roasted Hillary with the assistance of Bill?
I’m thinking airtight with all three.
No, no in Most Qualified Candidate Ever America, Hillary goes airtight on you.
Reloading articles always remind me of this .
FAKE EVERYTHING!
https://www.axios.com/trump-tweets-fake-everything-nbc-cnn-books-google-news-8ccb6e50-24cf-47dc-b547-34b2aa8e5e9f.html
Liars caught lying hate being called liars.
That said, Trump is going ridiculously overboard with these Tweet attacks. It’s starting to look like he’s frustrated with lack of progress on some things & is looking to gin up his ratings. And, yeah, I know, 12-D chess, but still…
Ramping up for the Kavanaugh confirmation?
Somebody should take his phone away for the entire week. He’s going to get himself into a lot of trouble being childish over McCain.
It’s summer. Nothing in politics counts until after labor day.
This will probably go through Labor Day. Trump is really jealous of all of the attention McCain got by dying. It’s just not fair!
Trump is Teflon. If he quit doing something stupid every time somebody thought he should, he wouldn’t be where he is now. His base is with him all the way.
I have only read the first one because
Just kidding, usually I’m not sober enough to read anything but the Glibbertary.
Fortunately I have a 5-day weekend to catch on stories and articles like these. Thanks for the education and entertainment.
I have a musket and used to reenactments long ago. Hang fires all the time of course – it never occurred to me to put my face in front of the barrel even shooting powder without and shot or ball.
I have vague memory of more than one person killing themselves by screwing around with blanks. I think one was an actor joking around with his fellow actors.
Yeah, the jet of gas that comes out of a muzzle when you are just burning powder is quite dangerous.
Jon-Erik Hexum.
Yes, some actor put a “prop” gun to his temple and pulled the trigger. He died sometime later from the concussion.
Brandon Lee was killed due to the scenario you mentioned: an uncharged round putting a bullet in the barrel, then a blank round was fired from the gun, with tragic results.
We had a re-enactor shot in Tombstone during one of the “gunfights” at the OK Corral.
Great article Suthen!