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A very long time ago, Eric bought himself a reloading setup so that he would not go broke playing with his new .357 mag. Eric also listened to advice from a trusted reloading buddy and followed the reloading manual to the absolute letter. Fast foreward 20 years to today when for the first time Eric produced as closely as possible, the origional .357 mag load. As my daughter would say, " WOW" that load is not for the young.
As I understand it the original ".357 Magnum" pressures were higher than current SAAMI specs. Interesting that the guns they were shot in were not particularly 'robust' by modern standards...
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
AJMD429 wrote:As I understand it the original ".357 Magnum" pressures were higher than current SAAMI specs. Interesting that the guns they were shot in were not particularly 'robust' by modern standards...
Learn somthing new everyday....... "original ".357 Magnum" pressures were higher than current SAAMI specs."
AJMD429 wrote:As I understand it the original ".357 Magnum" pressures were higher than current SAAMI specs. Interesting that the guns they were shot in were not particularly 'robust' by modern standards...
Learn somthing new everyday....... "original ".357 Magnum" pressures were higher than current SAAMI specs."
I've read where the original Elmer Keith 357mag loads were over 40,000psi while current SAAMI specs are limited to 35,000psi.
Steve Retired and Living the Good Life No Matter Where You Go, There You Are
I bought some Remington 357 factory loads some years back and let me tell you I shot about three cylinder fulls out of my 649 and I won't shoot anymore of them out of that piece anyways. It literally felt like my hand was on an anvil and someone hit it with a two pound ballpeen. I've got the remaining rounds in the box somewhere.
Once, qualifying for an armed security guard position (didn't end up taking it) I shot an S&W 581 4" on a small (4-lane) indoor range.
Most of the others had to borrow a 9mm or had a 9mm of their own.
Company rule was no Glocks and no .45s (since I had a Glock .45 and knew what I was doing with it more than the guy that made the rule, it annoyed me...so I got a .357).
it was reminiscent of the scene from Robocop. Small range, .357 158 grain +P and fireballs.
As they all started shooting, "pop pop pop BOOOOOM pop pop BOOOM" they all froze, <insert various multilingual expletives> WHAT IS THAT THING!
I had to wait till they were done firing their targets each time, my muzzle blast was distracting them.
It's not in the .44/.500 Hand Cannon level, but a .357 is still a very powerful piece.
The 357 is a nice caliber and does make a lot of noise. Interesting reading "The Complete Guide to Handloading" by Philip Sharpe talks about reloading the 357 when it first came out. He cautions everyone to stick to the old 38-44 loading data as max loads. Says the 357 is too dangerous to reload trying to duplicate the factory ballistics. Things sure have changed. It is interesting, he takes a lot of credit for helping develop the round and Elmer Keith does the same. I think Sharpe's semi wadcutter bullet was the bullet S&W went with while Keith's loadings were what they looked at. There was some back and forth talk at the time. Keith wanted his semi wadcutter bullet and Sharpe's design had a shorter nose length, so it was choosen due to the shorter cylinder space. Interesting reading that book.
I think the guns were plenty robust, they were N frame Smiths.
The original 158 grain factory loads ran about 1550 fps in an 8 3/8" barrel. Looking at a variety older ballistics charts, those loads have inched down over time. The current loads arent much more than the old 38-44 loads. I was really surprised looking at newer info.
even the newer fctory loads have a hideous muzzle blast to me tho. Never could quite get used to the muzzle blast of the 357. The 44, even in full magnum loads doesn't seem as bad. The 357 is a good round, I just don't like shooting them because of the muzzle blast. Mine are mostly plinkers that I rarely shoot. Great for smal game with 38 spl loads tho.
I think Keiths loads were a bit under factory loads in pressure.
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