It was a wonderfully clear day. The hot weather finally promised to brake and it was only going to be 94°F or so. A friend had given me several pounds of
AA No5 so I decided a test was in order. I love
AA No7 in 38 Super, and I use a lot of
AA No2 with 38Spcl wadcutters, so I was familiar with the product line and very interested to get shooting.
Background InfoCaliber: 9x19 Luger
Bullets: Precision Delta 124gr JHP
Brass: Win
Powder: Accurate (Ramshot) No5
Max Velocity: 1027fps (per Western Powder booklet V7.0)
Primer: CCI
OAL: 1.110"
Pistol: SP-01 Tac with 16# recoil spring
Qty: 8 rounds each, slow fired
Weather: 90°F, humid and clear
Chrono: ProChrono DLX
Powder Measure: Dillon (modified)
Load Avg Vel ES SD4.6gr 777 60 20
4.8 816 61 17
5.0 872 82 25
5.2 911 82 26
5.4 943 82 27
5.6 979 51 16
5.8 1012 45 15
NOTES• Metered very well due to small grain size. These may be the best metering powders on the market.
• Fine grains of this powder will funnel right through a missing primer, making a mess of your press in the process
• Burned remarkably clean, even at 4.6gr (See photo below.)
• Attribute the strange SD numbers to the powder and not my reloading technique. With the way this stuff meters, I was expecting much lower numbers.
• I wonder if the hotter Federal #100 SPP would ignite the ball powder better, and thereby lower the SD numbers ?• Will not achieve PF for competition, recommend 5.6-5.8gr for general plinking
• There were numerous "stove pipes" at 4.6gr
• Consistent slide 'lock back' achieved at 5.0gr
• Loads up to 5.0gr could be double loaded. Above that there would be noticeable spillage.
• This is a true, fine grained 'ball powder'. Any spillage is an issue due to the extremely fine grain of this powder. This stuff will really make a mess in no time flat because it's small enough to get into cracks and joints.
• I believe No7 is too slow for 9mm competition, so I was hoping that No5 would slip right in there and do a good job of filling the gap. It failed at this task. I'm really wanting to
like this powder, so I'll try No5 in 38Spcl and see what the results look like. Maybe it will do better at lower pressures.
• I would NOT buy or use this powder for 9mm