To update this thread...
- I shot 100 bullets at the longer OAL (1.145",) crimp area at .382-ish, with slower powder (W231)...50 were run through the factory crimp die, 50 weren't - all tumbled out of the CZ 85 combat
- I then shot the rest of the evening with cartridges that I knew were CZ tumblers out of the Glock 34 - not one of them tumbled...perfect round holes in the cardboard.
So it doesn't seem like the slower powder mattered. Tomorrow I'm going to go to a sporting goods store (that sells fishing and gun stuff) and buy some soft lead sinkers and slug the barrel in this CZ. If I had to form a conclusion right now about what is going on, based on all you guys have told me in this thread and my experiences so far, it would be that .356 is borderline too small for my CZ barrel...the crimps are all measuring in the .380" range, but differences in the wall thickness of the range brass I'm using is causing this softer lead to get resized to different degrees (based on how thick the walls of the particular piece of brass is) - the ones getting sized down too much are the tumblers...the round nose flat point design of the 147 gr bullet is more prone to tumbling if everything isn't perfect...the .356 size is plenty big enough for the Glock barrel, so that's why there are no issues with these bullets despite using the FCD, loading shorter, and using the fast S1000 powder...and basically, if I want to shoot 147's that are the same softness of these 147's, I'm going to have to order them at a size greater than .356.
One question I have is - is there any negative effect of using a cast bullet that is too large? For example, if I order .357's for the CZ and then shoot them out of the Glock (which probably has a smaller bore size,) what (if anything) will be the negative effect? I have to imagine there is some reason that folks wouldn't want an oversized cast bullet, otherwise I'd imagine .357 and .358 would be what most casters were making/selling...
I'll update this thread after I slug the barrels of the CZ and Glock.