jackie schmidt
New member
Back in the '70's, I fooled around with handguns quite a bit, especially Smith & Wesson Revolvers. I got to be good friends with the Range Officer at the Houston Police Range.
At the height of the "Dirty Harry" craze, when every one had to have a Model 29 44 Mag, I saw one completely blown up. It belonged to a Houston Police Officer.
He had bought the 44 brand new, and purchased all of the neccessary re-loading equipment at the same time. He had never hand loaded before.
His first trip to the Houston Police Range resulted in the very first round blowing the top three chambers out, and splitting the top strap. These were his just made "target loads".
Internal Affairs did an investigation. He claimed he did everything "by the book", even weighed each charge of Unique Powder. The charge was supposed to be a mild Target Load.
When they inspected his equipment, what they found was he did indeed weigh each charge. But through his ignorance, he had forgot to remove the little rubber protection gromets on the brand new beam balance's knife edges. The friction was so great that what he thought was about 10 grns of Unique was well over 25 grns. He did not think that the cases being completly full was a problem, since he was going by the book.
That much Unique behind a 240 grn lead target bullet produced the disastrous results describe before. He was lucky in that he only had some shrapnel wounds.
You just can't be too careful.........jackie
At the height of the "Dirty Harry" craze, when every one had to have a Model 29 44 Mag, I saw one completely blown up. It belonged to a Houston Police Officer.
He had bought the 44 brand new, and purchased all of the neccessary re-loading equipment at the same time. He had never hand loaded before.
His first trip to the Houston Police Range resulted in the very first round blowing the top three chambers out, and splitting the top strap. These were his just made "target loads".
Internal Affairs did an investigation. He claimed he did everything "by the book", even weighed each charge of Unique Powder. The charge was supposed to be a mild Target Load.
When they inspected his equipment, what they found was he did indeed weigh each charge. But through his ignorance, he had forgot to remove the little rubber protection gromets on the brand new beam balance's knife edges. The friction was so great that what he thought was about 10 grns of Unique was well over 25 grns. He did not think that the cases being completly full was a problem, since he was going by the book.
That much Unique behind a 240 grn lead target bullet produced the disastrous results describe before. He was lucky in that he only had some shrapnel wounds.
You just can't be too careful.........jackie