I don’t recall the grains of powder unless I check my notes. I haven’t tried anything over 1 ounce because I feel it’s unnecessary. The patterns I got with 1 ounce of tss 9 and 10 with a IM and F choke would be all anyone ever needs for Turkey if going that route. For waterfowl 3/4-7/8 ounce is usually the perfect payload to velocity ratio.
What the purpose of the mylar or whatever type plastic you are putting inside your wad? Im new to shotshell reloading but have reloaded metalic cartidges for 30 years so i get the basics.
Good question, the Mylar is an added protection for the the barrel. I stopped using them when I tested the wad and made sure no shot scrubbed through and damaged the barrel. Not all wads are the same. You can’t use tungsten or steel in a lead wad or you risk damaging the barrel. They make non toxic shot wads that have thicker shot cups to protect the barrel. The Mylar is just an added step in preventing damage.
@@RuggedSportsmen ok that was my thoughts. In researching a bit i saw there was tss wads. Figured maybe tjis way a way to use regular wads with tss but adding a layer of protection.
Depends, roll crimping is a little harsher on the hull. You can get a hull reconditioner and open the mouth back up after you roll and shoot it a couple times but not much more than that. I usually just trim aboout 1/8' off the roll crimp so the plastic is fresh again. I get about 3 rolls per hull with this until the hull is too short.
When you pattern do you see the 3.5 bismuth pretty clearly? I’ve thought about doing this, I just worry the tss will fragment the bismuth. Thanks -Aaron
THANKS
good description of your loaded
Thank you so much for taking your time and making video and teaching how to do those things
Nice job!
THANKS
for the black duck and the green collar duck
Would tss 9 be better than 8?
8.5s would be perfect. But if you had to choose the 8s would be better
Have you ever sent this for testing? Or have the data for it? To see the FPS and PSI?
1343fps 8990psi
Was that 25 grains of lil gun powder? Have you tried this around 1.25 oz of tss?
I don’t recall the grains of powder unless I check my notes. I haven’t tried anything over 1 ounce because I feel it’s unnecessary. The patterns I got with 1 ounce of tss 9 and 10 with a IM and F choke would be all anyone ever needs for Turkey if going that route. For waterfowl 3/4-7/8 ounce is usually the perfect payload to velocity ratio.
What the purpose of the mylar or whatever type plastic you are putting inside your wad? Im new to shotshell reloading but have reloaded metalic cartidges for 30 years so i get the basics.
Good question, the Mylar is an added protection for the the barrel. I stopped using them when I tested the wad and made sure no shot scrubbed through and damaged the barrel. Not all wads are the same. You can’t use tungsten or steel in a lead wad or you risk damaging the barrel. They make non toxic shot wads that have thicker shot cups to protect the barrel. The Mylar is just an added step in preventing damage.
@@RuggedSportsmen ok that was my thoughts. In researching a bit i saw there was tss wads. Figured maybe tjis way a way to use regular wads with tss but adding a layer of protection.
that is pretty cool man. Never checked out roll crimping before. Where do you get the tungsten from?
A guy named "hawglips" Hal from various forums
Are these 3” hulls or 2-3/4?
2 3/4"
How did you secure the hull plate jig to the drill press?
It’s not secured it’s just resting on the plate
can you tell me if we can reload the ascier with another stuffing example gluandi maguim
As long as it’s on the load data you can
In your experience with roll crimping, how many times can you reload a shell roll crimp vs. normal crimp?
Depends, roll crimping is a little harsher on the hull. You can get a hull reconditioner and open the mouth back up after you roll and shoot it a couple times but not much more than that. I usually just trim aboout 1/8' off the roll crimp so the plastic is fresh again. I get about 3 rolls per hull with this until the hull is too short.
I'm loading the 28ga with .33 oz tss #8 and .66oz bismuth #3.5
When you pattern do you see the 3.5 bismuth pretty clearly? I’ve thought about doing this, I just worry the tss will fragment the bismuth.
Thanks
-Aaron
Got the link on SW. thanks good read
@@11Bulletstopper havent noticed any breakage of bismuth using tin plated from bpi
20 gauge 2 3/4” 7/8 oz steel crimped load would be great
That's a normal 20 gauge load...
@@mightyjoeyoung1390 One that’s rated at 1500 FPS
how many tss in number in 435 gr number 8
256 pellets
Use wax instead of oil is too runy