ClaMar wrote on Apr 12
th, 2015 at 10:37pm:
I recall some testing years ago of pressure in double charges. The conclusion was doubling the powder charge quadrupled the pressure. So, say from 20,000 psi to 80,000 psi as an example.
It looked to me like the barrel failed, and I'd definitely think it was an overpressure situation. The weak spot on the Marlins is at the bottom of the barrel, where there is very thin metal due to the magazine tube cutout.
Clarence
A friend of mine once loaded some ˇ357 Mag, and there were a few ˇ38 Spl cases in the batch. He noticed, and put the ˇ38 Spl ones in the pocket of his work jacket and - forgot them.
Months later on the range he found them, and didn't remember how they had got there, so they went into the chambers of a ˇ38 Spl revolver...
Blew one side out of the cylinder and jacked-up the top strap.
I have the cylinder somewhere. That is not a pretty sight either.
The friend was an engineer, and he straightened the strap and put in a new cylinder (I can't remember what make the pistol was). It shot just as well as it had done previously.
I can't think that a ˇ357 Mag load is anywhere near double the ˇ38 Spl (I'm in a café ATM, so I've nothing to check with), but there's a moral here somewhere, viz: don't make mistakes, and if you do (and know you have done so), correct them immediately.
--
Aonghas