stubbicatt
New member
All, while looking for a suitable load for 357 magnum, now that my 2400 is gone, I discovered that Longshot is only 2 places "hotter" on the burn chart, suggesting that it is nearly equivalent.
Burn Rate Chart reference.
However, when researching loads using 158 grain bullets, the starting charge was 7.3 of Longshot, and 8.5 grains max. The starting load of 2400 is not printed on Alliant's website, but a max of 14.5 grains is listed. For comparison, 8.5 of Longshot is max while 14.5 of 2400 is max loading for this cartridge/bullet combination.
This makes no sense to me, seeing as it is nearly equivalent on the burn rate chart. The only thing I can think of is there must be a relatively HUGE jump between these two powders, demarcating a gap between slow pistol and fast rifle powders perhaps?
I'm ok following the recipes etc., so that's not an issue. What confounds me is the nearly twice the weight of 2400 to max out compared to the Longshot.
Anybody got a good explanation?
ETA: Anybody have any hands on experience with Longshot and cast 357 magnum loads they care to report?
Burn Rate Chart reference.
However, when researching loads using 158 grain bullets, the starting charge was 7.3 of Longshot, and 8.5 grains max. The starting load of 2400 is not printed on Alliant's website, but a max of 14.5 grains is listed. For comparison, 8.5 of Longshot is max while 14.5 of 2400 is max loading for this cartridge/bullet combination.
This makes no sense to me, seeing as it is nearly equivalent on the burn rate chart. The only thing I can think of is there must be a relatively HUGE jump between these two powders, demarcating a gap between slow pistol and fast rifle powders perhaps?
I'm ok following the recipes etc., so that's not an issue. What confounds me is the nearly twice the weight of 2400 to max out compared to the Longshot.
Anybody got a good explanation?
ETA: Anybody have any hands on experience with Longshot and cast 357 magnum loads they care to report?
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