Say you're wanting to load an obsolete cartridge for which there is no known data for (unless you happen to have some cordite.) I own QuickLOAD so I plugged some numbers in and got some data out. As long as you are well below max pressure (it is only a simulation after all) is there any reason NOT to trust it as a starting point? I'll download GRT and double check with that.
And is there a way to know which powders CAN'T be safely loaded light? For example: I use H110 for 357Mag and recall the load data saying don't go below published minimums. But I don't find that data on the bottle or Hogdon's website. Obsolete cartridges have no published minimum. What to do? Too low and you can get a squib - I can detect that and fix. But there is the rare kaboom where a light load of slow burning powder creates an air gap and too much surface of the powder simultaneously get the flame front and burns too rapidly. That's the one I'd like to avoid
I've read in some places that filling >80% of case capacity doesn't exhibit this problem (and some suggest thats where the minimum load comes from.) It does make sense that if there are no large air pockets the flame front can never reach a larger surface area than roughly the case diameter.
And is there a way to know which powders CAN'T be safely loaded light? For example: I use H110 for 357Mag and recall the load data saying don't go below published minimums. But I don't find that data on the bottle or Hogdon's website. Obsolete cartridges have no published minimum. What to do? Too low and you can get a squib - I can detect that and fix. But there is the rare kaboom where a light load of slow burning powder creates an air gap and too much surface of the powder simultaneously get the flame front and burns too rapidly. That's the one I'd like to avoid
