i loaded 1 shell with the 110 bushing that showed on my scale as around 20 grains. my scale wont read down to .9
Depends on which powder is used, and there are several. If using Winchester W748, it would be about 23.5 grains of weight of powder.
depends on which powder, and which .44. There were several different catridges with 44 in the name.
.30 caliber bullet, 30 grains of blackpowder when it was originally made. Smokeless powder is now used. Actually the 30-30 began life as the 30 WCF (Winchester Center Fire) aka 30 Winchester Smokeless or 30 SMOKELESS. The second 30 refers to 30 grains of smokeless powder. (30 grains of black powder would have been a pretty whimpy load)
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If you were to go to hodgdon,s web site there is a site entitled load data.Just pick the caliber first,then the bullet weight,then the powder maker,the site will show you the starting load in grains for the powder you choose and the max powder charge in grains also.Good luck!
There are 7,000 grains in one pound of gun powder. Grains are measured at 437.5 grains per ounce.
Alliant's 2400 or Winchester's 296 are both good powders for the 32/20 and will cover bullet weights from 85 up to 135 grains
7000 grains of powder, lead, or peanut butter to one pound.
Grains are a unit of weight. Bullets, powder charges and brass casings are all measured in grain weight. So, yes there are different grain weights in reloading. There are also different powder grains, as in the texture of the powder. Those include, stick powder, ball powder, flake powder, etc...
The last reloading manual I have that lists Winchester 450LS powder is the Speer number 8 manual published 1970.
black powder is usually measured by volume, 180 is more powerful, the higher the number the more powder there is and thus the more potential energy stored.
Nothing, really, but the name of the cartridge. When Winchester introduced the Model 94 in 1894 in the brand new smokeless powder round .30 Winchester caliber, most of the other ammunition on the market was black powder and had names such as 25-20, 44-40, 45-70, etc. These names stood for the caliber (diameter of the bullet) and how many grains of black powder were in the load. The .30 Winchester didn't follow that convention an dpeople didn't know what to expect, so it was not well accepted in the market and sold poorly. In a marketing move, Winchester changed the name to 30-30 (still, of course, a smokeless powder round with identical components as the .30 Winchester) and the guns and ammunition sold quite well.