Ubert Schofield in .45 Colt with heavy bullets?

Started by Virginia Gentleman, August 10, 2009, 08:56:49 AM

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Virginia Gentleman

Has anyone shot their Schofield replicas in .45 Colt with bullets heavier than 255-260 grains?  I am curious since there are many good cast bullets available in the 270-300 grain range and would they be OK at standard .45 Colt loadings (non Ruger/TC) to shoot in the modern replica Schofields?

Montana Slim

Pard, Your modern made revolver will likely stand the pressure of firing loads as long as they do not exceed the max pressure for the .45 Colt cartridge.....however, remember this is a break-top piece and as such could loosen up or suffer other damage from the strain of firing heavy loads, heavy bullets, etc. Please give this some thought.

Regards,
Slim
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Shotgun Franklin

There's no advantage to shooting heavier bullets. They will kick more, likely shoot higher and put more wear on the gun than a lighter bullet. Usually a gun shoots better/tighter groups the closer the bullet weight is to the original load. Not always but usually. I'd bet that gun is sighted to shoot about a 255 gr bullet.
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Grapeshot

Quote from: Virginia Gentleman on August 10, 2009, 08:56:49 AM
Has anyone shot their Schofield replicas in .45 Colt with bullets heavier than 255-260 grains?  I am curious since there are many good cast bullets available in the 270-300 grain range and would they be OK at standard .45 Colt loadings (non Ruger/TC) to shoot in the modern replica Schofields?

Take it from someone who has already ruined one Schfield using heavy bullets, with light loads, but..., stay with 200 -230 grain bullets using Schofield brass.  Don't take any chances.  All my loading was for Cowboy Action Shooting but I ended up with cracks in the frame and cylinder.  Don't take the risk.
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