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Reloading vintage paper 10 ga hulls ?
Ive been looking at some 10 ga paper hulls on a few different sites that are unfired , I was wondering if anyone here as attempted reloading/loading original paper hulls ?
I suppose the main two problems would be the primers would probably need replacing and trying to find if theres even a primer that would work and if the paper is still any good . |
I have had success replacing the old primers by first using a spent 209 and forcing it in then out and then seating a new 209. Have done this with 28 paper and 16 paper and plastic. Again first seat a SPENT 209 and then the live one
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The Winchester hulls I was looking at are primed with a Winchester #4 primer . I couldnt find much info about them when trying to google them . |
I had a few hundred of the size primers they used in the old hulls but have used them up think they were #57 or #67 something like that . And as stated above I got them so I could use 209’s after I used up the correct size primers .
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To me nothing looks better than a rolled crimped paper hull with your vintage sxs . |
just remember - the old primers were corrosive
the pitting we see is more due to them than the commonly blamed black powder, that is why you'll see pitting in a gun made after smokeless was common |
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My experience is replacing the 57 primer with the 209, if the 4 is the same as the 57 give or take it should work.
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I bought a never opened ammo case years ago that was packed with 30-06 ammo in the M1 Garand stripper clips . the cardboard on them looked new. It was loaded or at least packed in the ammo can in 1969 . We shot them through a cheap bolt gun we had. It left a nasty green residue in the bore . I assume that was from the primers ? I wouldnt use old primers in a vintage double though because you dont know if you are going to get a squib load or not using them . I dug up a old thread on here someone was asking about if they could use the 10 ga paper hulls that were loaded with flares . They are a green hull and look to use a 209 primer . Theres a whole box of them on GB and they look pristine . |
4 Attachment(s)
Winchester's NEW No. 4 was their primer for their REPEATER, LEADER, PIGEON and Metal Lined shells from about 1904 to the July 1931 Winchester catalog.
LEADER shell with the earlier No. 4 primer -- Attachment 81975 LEADER shell with the NEW No. 4 primer -- Attachment 81976 NEW No. 4 primers -- Attachment 81974 Attachment 81977 Winchester was purchased out of receivership by the Olin's of Western Cartridge Co. December 22, 1931. By the 1933 Winchester catalog the LEADER, REPEATER, Super-Speed and RANGER loaded shells were all being produced with Staynless priming, mirroring Western's Non-Corrosive priming in their RECORD, FIELD, Super-X and XPERT loaded shells. |
These are the hulls I mentioned
https://simpsonltd.com/winchester-10...er-shotshells/ It says the New No 4 was for loads not execding 3 1/2 drams but that seems wrong for the 10 ga 2 7/8 . All the vintage boxes ive seen list the dram equiv for it between 4-5 drams . |
While I don't have a good supply of early Winchester paper, I do have access to plenty of Union Metallic Cartridge Co. paper. In the UMC 1900 catalog, the heaviest 10-gauge load they offered in their low brass NITRO CLUB shell (their equal to the Winchester REPEATER) was 3 1/2 drams of bulk smokeless powder or the equivalent in dense smokeless powder pushing 1 1/4 ounce of shot. 1901 to 1909 the same. By the 1905 UMC catalog the max load offered in their high brass ARROW shell was 4 drams of bulk smokeless powder pushing 1 1/4 ounce of shot, and by 1906 it was up to 4 1/4 drams of bulk smokeless powder.
The 4 1/4 drams of bulk smokeless powder, or the equivalent in dense smokeless powder, pushing 1 1/4 ounce of shot was the heaviest 10-gauge loads our North American ammunition companies offered until the progressive burning powder, high velocity, loads with 1 5/8 ounce of shot came out circa 1925-6. |
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Box of WIN 10 gauge Repeaters to go with the full boxes of Repeaters I had in 12 , 20 and 28 gauge . But I’ve sold them so that’s past . |
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Sounds kind of odd that the 1 5/8oz load was developed so late , because that should be close to the weight of a 10 gauge round ball load . Then again I suppose post choke guns round balls were no longer used ? . Have you loaded any of the UMC paper hulls ? Would be interesting to see them reloaded. |
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https://www.gunbroker.com/item/860450843 |
i tried shooting some old repeater amm the other day one was a ten ga another 12 ga 2 3/4 inch a 3 inch magnum and another 3 inch with the 1 3/8 oz load...none would fire i snapped the primers at least 3 times...every thing haveing no 57 or 209 primers have fired in old ammo for me...charlie...i use small and large pistol primers for most of my old brass shells i load....charlie
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I watched a youtube video of a guy hunting ducks with a box of 12 ga shells from the 1950s . They fired each time but he didnt realize those old shells were lead :whistle:. If the paper hulls dont work out I may eventually ordered some brass ones from RCC . |
From what I've read, the non-corrosive primers don't have near the longevity of the old corrosive primers. Back in 2000 a friend gave me a late 1930s box of Winchester Super-Speed 12-gauge #6C. I took them with me to Nebraska and after getting a click, click at the first rooster I got up, I tried several more and none fired, so I left them on a fence post at a public hunting area in the southeast corner of Nebraska.
The lead balls for "single-ball" loads put out by our North American ammunition companies were 1 1/8 ounce in 10-gauge, 1 ounce in 12-gauge, 7/8 ounce in 16-gauge, 5/8 ounce in 20-gauge and 1/2 ounce in 28-gauge. The balls were small enough to go through chokes, the gas sealing being done by the wads. The ball diameters were -- 10-gauge -- .710" 12-gauge -- .645" 16-gauge -- .610" 20-gauge -- .545" 28-gauge -- .510" |
The original shells in question are over 100 years old.
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Milton, Check your PMs
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This was the chart I was looking at . Pure Lead Ball Weight .662 = 437 grains .678 = 469 grains .680 = 473 grains .690 = 495 grains .715 = 550 grains .730 = 586 grains .735 = 598 grains .760 = 661 grains .775 = 700 grains .835 = 875 grains .919 = 1167 grains 1.052 = 1750 grains The .760 661grs comes out to 1.5 oz with a 0.010 patch would be .77 which would fit a 10 ga . But from what ive read on roundballs, guns can be picky about roundball diameter and patch thickness . A different question , is there any benefit to using a slit vs unslit wad ? Though I want to try the fiber wads to get a feel of how it was done 100 years ago . |
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