Javascript DHTML Drop Down Menu Powered by dhtml-menu-builder.com
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 18, 2013, 02:13:21 pm
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Search:
Advanced search
Currently there are
0 Users in the Cas City Chat Rooms!
Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
|
Special Interests - Groups & Societies
|
The Winchester Model 1873
(Moderator:
Major 2
) | Topic:
Reloading in the late 1800's
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
« previous
next »
Pages:
[
1
]
Author
Topic: Reloading in the late 1800's (Read 1386 times)
w44wcf
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 763
Reloading in the late 1800's
«
on:
March 01, 2012, 08:27:58 am »
Tweet
Stepping back in time.......
reloading for Winchester 1873 rifles
Winchester supplied a hand tool, swaged bullets, cases & primers for those who owned '73 Winchesters and wanted to make their own ammunition.
w44wcf
Logged
aka Jack Christian SASS 11993 "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Philippians 4:13
aka John Kort
aka w30wcf (smokeless)
NRA Life Member
.22 W.C.F., .30 W.C.F., .44 W.C.F., .45 Colt Cartridge Historian
Grapeshot
Grapeshot. Cpt US Artillery
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 899
WARTHOG
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #1 on:
March 06, 2012, 04:42:38 am »
That's really interesting. Thanks for sharing this. Strange that their hand tool looks a lot like the Lyman/Ideal Tong Tool.
It's interesting to note that that the swaged bullets have their lube grooves rolled in like the crimp grooves on Jacketed bullets.
Fantastic post by the way.
Logged
Listen! Do you hear that? The roar of Cannons and the screams of the dying. Ahh! Music to my ears.
kurt250
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 214
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #2 on:
March 06, 2012, 05:19:35 am »
i know a collector/shooter that reloads all his 45/70 and 45/75 cartridges with original winchester reloading tools. he only shoots black powder. he says that he has never had any problems with the tools or the ammunition. he has had to replace a few parts on the reloadin g tools but not that many. these tools are all 100 years old or older. there still going strong. shows what good design and good materials can do. kurt250
Logged
Sir Charles deMouton-Black
THE ANCIENT SUBSTANCE ENDURES - ALL LESSER PROPELLANTS SHALL FIZZLE
NCOWS
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 4042
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #3 on:
March 06, 2012, 11:03:02 am »
$44.50 for the whole shootin match. Wasn't that about the pay of a cowboy for a month and a half?
Logged
NCOWS #1154, SCORRS, STORM, BROW, 1860 Henry, CHINOOK COUNTRY
THE SUBLYME & HOLY ORDER OF THE SOOT (SHOTS)
Those who are no longer ignorant of History may relive it,
without the Blood, Sweat, and Tears.
With apologies to George Santayana & W. S. Churchill
"What experience and history teach is this - that people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles deducted from it." George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
w44wcf
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 763
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #4 on:
March 08, 2012, 09:08:32 am »
Grapeshot,
Thank you for the kind words. Actually, the Winchester loading tools preceeded the Ideal tools by about 15 years or so.
Sir Charles,
The price for reloading the first 1,000 rounds would be 19.50 (11.00+2.40+6.00+.10) less the powder and the initial cost of the reloading tool. For the 2nd reloading and beyond - 8.50 (19.60 - 11.00 cases) + powder cost.
At 20.00 / 1,000 for factory cartridges, it was actually a bit less expensive than loading your first 1,000 rounds since the reloads would have cost a bit more with the cost of the powder added.
No doubt, to reduce the cost several folks would have gotten together to buy cartridges or the components to reduce the overall cost. Perhaps one of the earliest "group buys"...........
w44wcf
Logged
aka Jack Christian SASS 11993 "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Philippians 4:13
aka John Kort
aka w30wcf (smokeless)
NRA Life Member
.22 W.C.F., .30 W.C.F., .44 W.C.F., .45 Colt Cartridge Historian
FriscoCounty
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 133
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #5 on:
March 08, 2012, 03:06:34 pm »
For the first 1,000 rounds, buy factory. For reloading it would be
$5.00 Reloading tools
$2.40 1,000 primers
$3.60 for 6 lbs of gunpowder at the trading post price of 60 cents per pound (40 grains per cartridge)
$4.35 for 29 lbs of lead at the trading post price of 15 cents per pound (200 grain bullets)
$15.35 for 2nd 1,000 rounds and $10.35 for the 3rd 1,000 rounds. Add a $1.65 for buying bullets, instead of casting.
If you bought at a rail head, like Dodge City, gunpowder would cost 44 cents per pound and lead 13 cents per pound.
$13.81 for 2nd 1,000 rounds and $8.81 for the 3rd 1,000 rounds.
I got the prices for gunpowder and lead in 1875 from "Adobe Walls: The History and Archaeology of the 1874 Trading Post"
By T. Lindsay Baker, Billy R. Harrison, B. Byron Price. It can be previewed on Google books. The prices were on page 26.
Logged
NRA Life Benefactor, CRPA Life, SASS Life 83712, RO I, Hiram Ranger 48, Coyote Valley Sharpshooters, Coyote Valley Cowboys
Fox Creek Kid
NCOWS
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 3658
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #6 on:
March 12, 2012, 11:06:44 pm »
The biggest problem on the Frontier was the price of lead as everything was freighted by wagon for the end journey. It was exhorbitant for the times at approx. 10 cents per lb. There was a thread on this once on the Shiloh Sharps Forum and I figured it was almost the same price (if not a little cheaper) to buy swaged & patched bullets from Sharps than buy lead and cast your own.
Factor in the time trying to cast over a campfire dog tired at night as well.
Another problem was surely the rapidly eroding cases from the early mercuric primers if you didn't quickly "kill" the corrosion with soap & water or vinegar.
Logged
NCOWS #1920
kurt250
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 214
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #7 on:
May 04, 2012, 05:15:47 am »
i feel the fact that you may not be close to a hardware store that carried ammunition was a large part of the need to reload. i sure costs were important(as it is now) but being able to get ammo in the amount you may need for a winter was also very important. until the railroads got close to were you were you were relying on fright wagons. that could be spotty at best sometimes . with the railroads a whole new world opened up for the average person. besides mail and newspapers for back east, there was sears and roebuck. look at one of those reprinted catalog. they carried everything a man out west could need. look at one. my grand mother used to tell me about living in kansas as a little girl and how great grandma ordered things for her and great grandpa and the farm from sears. she said it didn't take that long to get stuff from chicago .she said when they had a good year she would order cloths a sewing machine, pots and pans. she said it made life a lot easier for everyone. you went in to town that was about 23 miles away and picked up the mail went to the general store and stopped at the railroad station and asked the fright master i anything had come in.
Logged
Sir Charles deMouton-Black
THE ANCIENT SUBSTANCE ENDURES - ALL LESSER PROPELLANTS SHALL FIZZLE
NCOWS
Top Active Citizen
Offline
Posts: 4042
Re: Reloading in the late 1800's
«
Reply #8 on:
May 04, 2012, 10:04:00 am »
SOOOH! The attraction of online shopping is not new, and seems to have been almost as fast.
Logged
NCOWS #1154, SCORRS, STORM, BROW, 1860 Henry, CHINOOK COUNTRY
THE SUBLYME & HOLY ORDER OF THE SOOT (SHOTS)
Those who are no longer ignorant of History may relive it,
without the Blood, Sweat, and Tears.
With apologies to George Santayana & W. S. Churchill
"What experience and history teach is this - that people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles deducted from it." George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Pages:
[
1
]
Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L
|
Special Interests - Groups & Societies
|
The Winchester Model 1873
(Moderator:
Major 2
) | Topic:
Reloading in the late 1800's
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Cas City
-----------------------------
=> Midway USA's Cowboys
=> Cas City - Site Support & Comments
=> CAS City Classifieds
=> Greetings!
-----------------------------
CAS TOPICS
-----------------------------
=> The Longbranch
=> CAS Matches & Events
===> Archived Matches & Events
=> Shooter's Meeting
=> CAS FAQ
=> The Leather Shop
=> Gun Reviews
=> The Powder Room - CAS reloading
=> The Darksider's Den
===> The Dark Arts
===> SHOTS
=> 1911 & Wild Bunch Shooting
=> NCOWS
=> WESTERN 3 GUN
=> Gunsmithing
-----------------------------
Special Interests - Groups & Societies
-----------------------------
=> Cas City Historical Society
===> The Old Fashioned Way
=> The American Plainsmen Society
=> Zoot Shooters
=> The Cutting Edge
=> The Barracks
===> GAF Regulations
===> GAF After Action Reports
=> Cosie's Corner & Feed Bag
===> The Pantry
=> BOLD Chambers
=> RATS
=> Spencer Shooting Society
=> Colt Firearms
=> USFA CSS
=> Colt SAA Clones
===> Colt Long Gun Clones
=> SCORRS
=> STORM
=> Frontier Iron
=> BROW
===> The BROW Archive
=> 1860 Henry
=> The Winchester Model 1873
=> The Winchester Model 1876
-----------------------------
Regional Topics
-----------------------------
=> Texas
=> Chinook Country
=> Kansas
=> Nebraska
=> CAStm down under
-----------------------------
GENERAL TOPICS
-----------------------------
=> The Shootin' Range
=> Constitutional rights (RKBA)
=> Tall Tales
=> Saddlebag Tales
===> ST Comments
=> Books & Movies
About CasCity.com
*
Contact us
*
Privacy Policy
*
Terms of Use
Loading...