.22 Hornet, I will say it's hard to beat Lyman/Ideal 225438. Be aware though that there are at least four iterations of that mold over the hundred years or so it's been in the lineup, per the examples in my hands - small subtle differences but different nonetheless. As a general rule fast pistol powders rock for use in the Hornet. My go-to load is 225438, gas checked, 1:20 alloy, 50/50 lube, 2.0gr. Red Dot, for around 1200fps. Roughly MOA accuracy out of Browning Low Wall (when sized .2245"), 1 1/2 MOA out of Stevens 44 .22 WCF (unsized as-cast .226"). Ideal #225230, 45gr. plain base, has proved to be pretty finicky. Best results for me for Hornet use are with 1:20, 50/50 lube, and 1.8gr. Bullseye. Accuracy not at par with 225438, but not bad - 2 MOA on average. Slated for more work this season. Another favorite, for a bit more zip, is the Lee Bator 52gr. blunt round nose (which I think is discontinued but pops up in the used market occasionally). It's a short blunt GC'ed bullet that stabilizes ok in 1-16" barrels, about same length as the 45gr. 225438 - at least my mold cavity is. I cast them hard, out of lino/pure lead 5:4 ratio, sized a bit differently depending on which gun, 50/50 lube, 6.0gr. 2400. Frankly I've never chrono'ed it but it's snappy - right like a .22 WMR. Dime sized groups @ 50 nickel-quarter sized at 100 out of both my M54 K-Hornet and kiplauf 5.6x35R. One final comment: I get better accuracy with all the above mentioned loads when using small pistol primers. In some instances the difference is dramatic versus using Remington 6 1/2 primers (which are my go-to's for full snot jacketed loads - 40gr. Vmax + 13gr. Lil Gun, 3100fps). Any way you cut it, Hornets + cast loads = cheap shooting.
|