I use RMR bullets in 9mm 124gn FMJ RN and I'm having trouble finding data in Lyman 49 and Hornady 9. So, I'm looking for another manual and wondered if you guys new of a manual that had it all so to speak.
I use RMR bullets in 9mm 124gn FMJ RN and I'm having trouble finding data in Lyman 49 and Hornady 9. So, I'm looking for another manual and wondered if you guys new of a manual that had it all so to speak.
Hodgdon publishes one in magazine form every year that I really like. Has Hodgdon, IMR, and Winchester powders in it. That one and the two you listed are my go to manuals
I use the Hodgdon and Nosler on-line reloading data for most of my rifle and pistol loads.
RMR does not publish a Reloading manual for their bullets. I have not seen a manual that includes RMR bullets.
All that remains is to take somebody else's data for a 124 gr bullet and apply logic and caution. That is what the fine print about "starting loads" and "working up" is about. It is the difference between Reloading and Handloading.
Code Name: JET STREAM
No not really. Find a safe load that's close-ish to what you have and work the load up, it's what everyone's gotta do.
If RMR bullets are like practically every other FMJ on the planet just find a FMJ 124 grain load and work from there. When I load Xtremes I don't bother looking for Xtreme specific load data, the powder type is more important IMO.
Last edited by Peally; 04-19-2018 at 07:48 PM.
Semper Gumby, Always Flexible
Last edited by Mike C; 04-19-2018 at 07:55 PM.
http://handloads.com/
I use this cautiously.
I use the online data from Alliant when loading handgun since I have standardized on BE-86 for nearly everything I load. 5.4 grains with a RMR plated flat point 124 grain bullet yielded an average of 1165 fps from a G2 G17.
The most accurate load I've tried in the 9mm, as well as my current standard, is 5.9 grains of BE-86 under a 124 grain concave base FMJ.
We may lose and we may win, but we will never be here again.......
Manuals are reference books. The student of reloading can't have too many. Reading and studying their narratives contributes to the hand loader's knowledge. Comparing data from one to the other provides insight. But you can get by with only one, and then there are published data on the net. I bought my first manual when a teenager--years before I bought the first equipment. I continue to study and learn new things frequently. Sometimes I find out information on this forum from guys who were born after I hit middle age.