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5/7/2012 2:06:13 PM EDT
hey whats up i need some load data for 9mm out of a glock 19

i have power pistol and cci primers

i have 115 rainier fmj and nosler 124 jhp

i need load data and c.o.l. thanks folks
5/7/2012 2:11:50 PM EDT
[#1]
Gooogle is your friend
5/7/2012 2:15:54 PM EDT
[#2]
Quoted:
Gooogle is your friend


so are powder company websites and load manuals.
5/7/2012 3:05:10 PM EDT
[#3]
Brian Enos
5/7/2012 4:23:14 PM EDT
[#4]
I use 5.7 grains of Power Pistol with 115 grain Remington jhp's and Hornady 115 grain XTP's. It duplicates factory velocities in my Glock 23 (KKM 9mm conversion barrel) at 1150 fps. I believe Ranier makes a plated bullet, not a fmj. They need a slightly lower charge of powder if they are plated. I believe they suggest using lead bullet data.

Try 5.0 to 5.2 of Power Pistol for the 124 grain bullets.
5/7/2012 6:49:19 PM EDT
[#5]



Quoted:


hey whats up i need some load data for 9mm out of a glock 19



i have power pistol and cci primers



i have 115 rainier fmj and nosler 124 jhp



i need load data and c.o.l. thanks folks
Trolling for loads is a poor idea, as you should confirm any load given on any forum with published data.



This includes any load I should post.




Get a reloading manual or visit powder maker web sites to get data.




Read the reloading data in the reloading manual and learn how to work up loads.




Read the FAQ's and Tutorials for a lot of good information.




Good luck.





 
5/7/2012 9:43:47 PM EDT
[#6]
Quoted:
I use 5.7 grains of Power Pistol with 115 grain Remington jhp's and Hornady 115 grain XTP's. It duplicates factory velocities in my Glock 23 (KKM 9mm conversion barrel) at 1150 fps. I believe Ranier makes a plated bullet, not a fmj. They need a slightly lower charge of powder if they are plated. I believe they suggest using lead bullet data.

Try 5.0 to 5.2 of Power Pistol for the 124 grain bullets.


I have also found that 5.7 grains of Power Pistol with a 115 grain FMJ is an almost exact duplicate of factory ammo.  Here's some chronograph data from a Glock 19:

Federal 115 gr. FMJ RN (WM5199)
Max: 1114
Min: 1094
Ave: 1104
ES: 20.0
SD: 6.0

Remington UMC 115 gr. MC (L9MM3)
Max: 1112
Min: 1079
Ave: 1097
ES: 33.0
SD: 11.2

5.7 gr. Power Pistol, 115 gr. Winchester FMJ (Flat Base)
Max: 1112
Min: 1082
Ave: 1096
ES: 30.0
SD: 10.1

I just chronographed a bunch of 124 grain Precision Delta JHPs over 5.1 grains of Power Pistol this afternoon.  A bit slower than I would like, but they are pretty accurate through everything I've tested them in so far.  I can provide more chronograph data later if you like.

Hope this helps!


** Edit **

Dryflash3,

I just read your post, which I had skipped in my haste to post my chronograph data.  Please let me know if you'd like me to remove my post.  I definitely agree with starting with reputable sources and working your way up, and would hate to be responsible for someone jumping in over their head without doing the proper research first.
5/8/2012 7:58:07 AM EDT
[#7]




Quoted:



Quoted:

I use 5.7 grains of Power Pistol with 115 grain Remington jhp's and Hornady 115 grain XTP's. It duplicates factory velocities in my Glock 23 (KKM 9mm conversion barrel) at 1150 fps. I believe Rainier makes a plated bullet, not a fmj. They need a slightly lower charge of powder if they are plated. I believe they suggest using lead bullet data.



Try 5.0 to 5.2 of Power Pistol for the 124 grain bullets.




I have also found that 5.7 grains of Power Pistol with a 115 grain FMJ is an almost exact duplicate of factory ammo. Here's some chronograph data from a Glock 19:



Federal 115 gr. FMJ RN (WM5199)

Max: 1114

Min: 1094

Ave: 1104

ES: 20.0

SD: 6.0



Remington UMC 115 gr. MC (L9MM3)

Max: 1112

Min: 1079

Ave: 1097

ES: 33.0

SD: 11.2



5.7 gr. Power Pistol, 115 gr. Winchester FMJ (Flat Base)

Max: 1112

Min: 1082

Ave: 1096

ES: 30.0

SD: 10.1



I just chronographed a bunch of 124 grain Precision Delta JHPs over 5.1 grains of Power Pistol this afternoon. A bit slower than I would like, but they are pretty accurate through everything I've tested them in so far. I can provide more chronograph data later if you like.



Hope this helps!





** Edit **



Dryflash3,



I just read your post, which I had skipped in my haste to post my chronograph data. Please let me know if you'd like me to remove my post. I definitely agree with starting with reputable sources and working your way up, and would hate to be responsible for someone jumping in over their head without doing the proper research first.


Keep your post as is, I have no problem with it.



Your load is lighter than my top load I worked up to anyway.



Just trying to help OP understand it is his responsibility to verify loads.

5/8/2012 6:09:38 PM EDT
[#8]
thank you all so much anything on the nosler 124 jhp ?????
5/8/2012 10:58:26 PM EDT
[#9]
Quoted:
thank you all so much anything on the nosler 124 jhp ?????


I'm still a very new reloader, so if I say something wrong I'll be corrected asap.

I think dryflash was nicely suggesting that you get a reloading manual (or two).  Read them, look at manufacturers data, and proceed from there.  I think it is fine to ask for input on loading xx bullet, with xx powder, with xx primer. But to come ask for a full on recipe leads folks here to believe you aren't going about things the correct way.

Learning the process and component interaction takes time & testing. These are things that cannot be obtained from the internet. Work up loads that function in your firearm.

BTW: I use Power Pistol in my 9mm, .357, 45 Auto and I like the powder a lot.
5/9/2012 3:17:04 AM EDT
[#10]
Get several, current manuals.  Check powder manufacturers' web sites for their load data.  THEN start pondering which load to use.  Why is this important?  Because a handloader needs to know WHY he uses a particular quantity of a specific power behind a specific bullet, and needs to make an intelligent, informed decision on this subject.  It is YOUR safety on the line, so it is essential that YOU know what you're doing before you do it.
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