This post is just some commentary on reloading 9mm for shooting practice and competition. If you don't care about pistols, and don't shoot 9mm, this may not be anything worth reading.
I shoot a fairly hefty amount of 9mm each year (generally over 20,000 rounds) which means that I spend quite a bit on bullets. In the past, I've used Montana Gold 124gr CMJs with excellent results, but lately I've had a number of people suggest trying Xtreme bullets and Blue Bullets.
MG CMJ are jacketed, Xtreme are plated, and Blue Bullets are coated-lead bullets, and in that order, are increasingly cheaper. In general (stereotypically) plated bullets are less accurate than jacketed, and coated-lead bullets both smoke a lot more and leave significant lead residue in barrels, so in the past I've pretty much stayed away from both.
However, at my volume of shooting, assuming I'm shooting approximately 20,000 rounds a year, this will cost me for bullets:
MG: $2160 for 22500
Xtreme: $1710 for 22500
Blue Bullets: $1610 for 25200
...in other words, either one of the other two bullets would give me a significant savings over Montana Gold, IF they were as reliable and accurate. (MG is about 9.6 cents per round, Xtreme about 7.6, and BB about 6.4. That adds up quickly.)
So I decided to do some comparisons. I already have quite a bit of data for Montana Gold, so I ordered some Xtreme and Blue Bullets and got some reloaded.
In general, for all three cases I'm loading 124gr RN (BB: 125 gr RN) to an OAL of 1.12. Initially, I loaded all at 5.0gr of WSF powder.
Testing day 1:
I used the MG rounds as calibrations for my chrono---we know that under different lighting conditions chronos will read differently unless you have a light box (I don't) but over the last 4 years I've been consistently getting 134 powder factor out of my MG loads at all major matches, so I took the velocities as reported from the chrono and normalized them based on the MG load as 134 PF.
I also shot groups at 15 yards. My group shooting actually kinda sucks, but I tend to be consistent in my suckage, so that I can at least get reasonable
comparisons between loads.
Remember: I've been using MG bullets with good results for several years.
Chrono results:
MG: 134 PF (duh), 2.5 standard deviation, min 130, max 137
Xtreme: 125.5 PF, 3.4 StDev, min 121.0, max 131.1
BB: 137.2 PF, 1.1 StDev, min 135.5, max 138.6
Accuracy results:
Comparison-wise, the BB groups were approximately 2/3 the size of the MG rounds, even when shooting fairly rapidly. (Which was a surprise, since the higher power factor made for a noticeably different recoil impulse.)
The Xtreme bullets, on the other hand, were acting extremely strange---actually keyholing at 15 yards. I was shooting at a bullseye target on an 8.5x11 piece of paper, and this is what I got:
...yes, that is actually completely off the paper. And yes, there were shots on the paper and off to the other side of the paper also.
And no my group shooting does not suck that much---for 15 yards, generally within a couple of inches. Being off the bullseye is odd, much less off the paper.
So: BB were both more accurate and more consistent than my standard MG loads (smaller groups, and half the standard deviation in velocity ranges). Xtreme...
far poorer in both. (Which is very strange, as I have a number of friends who shoot Xtreme bullets with excellent results.)
Traded from the stock Glock barrel to a KKM barrel---MG groups sizes the same, Xtreme STILL keyholing all over the place, BB group sizes still 2/3 the size of MG rounds. MG and BB both hitting about 2 inches higher than out of the Glock barrel. VERY ODD that the Xtreme bullets were acting this way.
Note: I chronoed with the BB rounds that passed the case gauge. However, during group shooting I used bullets that did NOT pass case gauge. (I case gauge all my 9mm. If it passes, I'll shoot it in matches. If it fails, I'll use it for practice only.) No jams, malfunctions, or issues with BB. Several Xtreme did not cycle correctly even though I only used rounds that had passed the case gauge.
At the end, I loaded up a mag of the BB and shot them SHO and WHO with the weakest, most out-of-line, pathetic excuse for a grip that I could. No jams or malfunctions, no feeding issues at all.
Shot quite a few more of all types after, finishing with about 50 more BB. Checked the barrel---absolutely no leading residue at all, far as I can tell. Looked (and brushed out) no differently than when I shoot MG. No noticeable smoke while shooting either.
More to follow...