My renewed interest in a big bore lever gun has me burning up the interwebs looking at components, ballistics, etc
One thing that I have noticed is how many dead links there are for things like gunsmiths and cast bullets that were going concerns back in the day
Anyway, back on topic: All my reloading manuals are 25+ years old and are still packed away following our last move 2 1/2 years ago
If big bore cast bullet pistol and rifle reloading is the topic, what current manuals would you guys recommend?
Lyman was always my go to for cast bullets but that particular manual is probably 30+ years old, even if I could find it in the unpacked boxes
Loading Manuals Then and Now
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200yearstoolate
- Levergunner
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2026 6:51 pm
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
I would certainly recommend a new Lyman loading manual which has both cast bullet and jacketed bullet data for rifles and pistols.
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
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I have the Lyman, the Lee, and an old Sierra manual - the Lyman and Lee manuals have a lot of just general reloading information in them, which I find helpful, although experienced reloaders may not need that kind of reference, but I do get most of my reloading data off of two websites:
AmmoGuide.com - it has very sophisticated features that allow you to so things like compare ballistics and cartridge dimensions, see what loads are available with a given powder for any number of cartridges, and so on. There is commercial load data from manufacturers listed along with (but identifiable from) individual load data people submit. Many cartridges that are obsolete or wildcat are listed too, and each cartridge has some history of development stuff too.
$19/year or something like that. Well worth it.
LoadData.com - less of the 'tools' than AmmoGuide, but also tons of data, and links to ballistic calculators or charts (I forget which - I don't use LoadData that much).
I have the Lyman, the Lee, and an old Sierra manual - the Lyman and Lee manuals have a lot of just general reloading information in them, which I find helpful, although experienced reloaders may not need that kind of reference, but I do get most of my reloading data off of two websites:
AmmoGuide.com - it has very sophisticated features that allow you to so things like compare ballistics and cartridge dimensions, see what loads are available with a given powder for any number of cartridges, and so on. There is commercial load data from manufacturers listed along with (but identifiable from) individual load data people submit. Many cartridges that are obsolete or wildcat are listed too, and each cartridge has some history of development stuff too.
$19/year or something like that. Well worth it.
LoadData.com - less of the 'tools' than AmmoGuide, but also tons of data, and links to ballistic calculators or charts (I forget which - I don't use LoadData that much).
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
I use the latest (6th?) Lyman Cast Bullet manual a lot and with Hodgdon powders being the main ones available these days, their online load data is awful handy. I just noticed recently that there's a link on the Hodgdon site where you can request specific data but haven't tried it out for myself. Seems like a neat deal, sort of the modern version of writing to the Hercules Experimental Station back in the day.
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200yearstoolate
- Levergunner
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2026 6:51 pm
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
I just went on the Hodgdon site and boy am I out of touchsamsi wrote: ↑Wed Jan 07, 2026 8:37 pm I use the latest (6th?) Lyman Cast Bullet manual a lot and with Hodgdon powders being the main ones available these days, their online load data is awful handy. I just noticed recently that there's a link on the Hodgdon site where you can request specific data but haven't tried it out for myself. Seems like a neat deal, sort of the modern version of writing to the Hercules Experimental Station back in the day.
Do they own all the brands listed on there now?
Hodgdon, Accurate, IMR, Winchester, etc?
- earlmck
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 3768
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- Location: pert-neer middle of Oregon
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
200yearstoolate wrote: ↑Wed Jan 07, 2026 9:10 pmYes they do. Removed a lot of competition from the powder mfg. industry the last few years...
The greatest patriot...
is he who heals the most gullies. Patrick Henry
is he who heals the most gullies. Patrick Henry
- marlinman93
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 7139
- Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2007 3:40 pm
- Location: Oregon
Re: Loading Manuals Then and Now
Personally I'd recommend you dig out your 25 year old manuals and use them instead of buying new. The data is still relevant and likely as good as anything new. I've often found myself digging through ancient reloading manuals to find good quality loads, especially for cast bullet loads. The old manuals just have more data for what I shoot.
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