Raining here now. No news from those who were commming down.
Picked up 50 brass for the 45-70 last night.
Needs some serious reshaping. I should get 20-30 good pieces out of them.
I will be preping them before reloading.
Drill out the flash hole to 0.09", primer pocket cleaneded up and cut to a uniform depth, deburr the flash hole.
Weigh them into batches. All the same headstamp so by weighing them any differences will be due to thickness of the brass. Those of approx the same weight should have the same space inside the case for the powder.
I do this with my .223 brass. These pieces all weigh within .5 gn of each other.
Call me pendantic but accuracy is all about uniformity and repeatability.
I like to cut out as many variables as possible then I have nothing but myself to blame when I miss.
Looking now for some full length dies for the 45-70. Then I will be ready to reload properly. I have been pouring over the books by Paul Mathews lately in search of any tips on making the perfect 45-70 BP round. My head is swimming with in formation.
The Rolling Block still needs the rear sight mounted to the upper tang. I'm a bit loathe to do this myself as I dont feel really confident in my ability to align it correctly.
Found a butt plate for this rifle. Half shutzen style made of solid brass. Weighs in at 1 kg for this alone. Total weight of the rifle should be about 14lbs. This should soak up the recoil of a heavy BP round with a 525 gn bullet.
Rain stopped.
Give me another 2-3 months and I will be in full training mode with my BP rifles. Sharron has agreed that I need to spend a little more time on my hobbies. We have spent so much on the house and garden and need a break.
I will probably be looking for another couple of hundred 45-70 brass eventually. That way I can find a nice lot of brass that match. It will also mean that I can vary my reloading in the search for the correct combination that suits the rifle.
So much to do and so little time. Oh well I plan on being around for a few more years.
Chris
"When you think of it,
Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"
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