Re: Cartridge Box Question
Hallo!
I did not bother to check to the SEARCH feature to see if the old discussions on bow to weigh down a cartridge box are still available...
But what I was referring to was where lads melted lead and the poured it into the bottom of the tins where when it crystalized and cooled formed a solid weight that easily went back into the box with no muss or fuss.
In rough math, a full 40 round .58 box's worth of cartridge bullet would be roughly 40 times a nominal 510 grains or a total of 20,400. With 7,000 grains in a pound that is not quite three (2.914) pounds of lead missing from a reenactor's box.
Of course, it goes down with each round fired or dropped.
Before I get asked... ;) :)
With a nominal 60 grain charge of FF, that is, not weighing the papers, 40 times 60 grains or another 2400 grains or roughly a third a pound (.34).
Curt
Hallo!
I did not bother to check to the SEARCH feature to see if the old discussions on bow to weigh down a cartridge box are still available...
But what I was referring to was where lads melted lead and the poured it into the bottom of the tins where when it crystalized and cooled formed a solid weight that easily went back into the box with no muss or fuss.
In rough math, a full 40 round .58 box's worth of cartridge bullet would be roughly 40 times a nominal 510 grains or a total of 20,400. With 7,000 grains in a pound that is not quite three (2.914) pounds of lead missing from a reenactor's box.
Of course, it goes down with each round fired or dropped.
Before I get asked... ;) :)
With a nominal 60 grain charge of FF, that is, not weighing the papers, 40 times 60 grains or another 2400 grains or roughly a third a pound (.34).
Curt
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