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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
How do you decide which max load is the real max load?
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<blockquote data-quote="streak" data-source="post: 1420924" data-attributes="member: 11744"><p>Manuals as you see can disagree with each other all the time. Like the others have said, watch for pressure signs. Brass that is hard to extract is another overpressure sign that they didn't mention if the rounds don't easily fall back out of the revolver (i'm assuming thats what your shooting) after being shot. Also always inspect your brass, esp the first few load ups, for bulging and splits.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="streak, post: 1420924, member: 11744"] Manuals as you see can disagree with each other all the time. Like the others have said, watch for pressure signs. Brass that is hard to extract is another overpressure sign that they didn't mention if the rounds don't easily fall back out of the revolver (i'm assuming thats what your shooting) after being shot. Also always inspect your brass, esp the first few load ups, for bulging and splits. [/QUOTE]
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How do you decide which max load is the real max load?
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