RayH wrote on Feb 26
th, 2014 at 3:41am:
I have heard numerous comments regarding this chambering indicating its "loading difficulties". It has been described as "difficult to load", and "fussy". Could anyone elaborate? I don't understand. The brass seems to be good to go right out of the box. Availability of cases has been no problem. Other components such as primers, powder, wad material, etc. are standard fare. If my bullets are consistently cast, weighed and lubed and my primers are carefully set and my powder is accurately measured and my wads are uniform, where's the problem? Is there a "gremlin" awaiting that I've yet to meet? Thanks.
Hi,
I promised some info on the .32-20 CPA and I apologize for being slow. The "fussiness" is a combination of the things I had to do to make my .32-20 CPA rifle accurate and the corresponding wear on a case that was never meant to endure this level of abuse.
The short version is that accuracy required mv's of 1475 - 1500 fps. Those mv's required 12.8 grains of AA 4100 held tight against the primer using a .45 caliber, single-sheet newspaper wad. That loading caused incipient case head separation at 10-12 firings.
Starting with a new Starline case, the first three firings would not produce good accuracy. Accuracy would be good from 4 through 8 firings and would then start to drop off. After 10 firings the case was discarded.
All of the above precluded the use of a single case. All shooting was with multiple cases, all cases were loaded at home, and all cases were segregated and organized by lot and by the number of times fired. I went through 1000 plus Starline cases when the rifle was in use.
But wait, there's more. Cases with imperfectly centered flash holes were useless and discarded up-front. Primers were installed using a KM dial indicator priming tool. Placing the newspaper wads required two special tools and good hand-eye coordination.
JackHughs