38 Spl +P+ LRN

Dewey New

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texas
I bought a old, white box of 38 spl LRN at my local, thinking they were standard loads. The end label just said .38 special LRN.
Today, looking at the head stamp codes I read WCC +P+ 81.
So I think I know this: Winchester Cartridge Company, nickel plated brass, 1981 mfg.
What I don't know is what pressure is +P+?
I really don't care to shoot +P in my guns, much less something approaching .357 pressures.
Thanks!
 
Thanks, I found that article, but it made no mention of Lead Round Nose factory loads in +P+.
EDIT: I pulled the box out and looked at every case head. They are a mixed bag of companies, all nickel. So I was sold a box of someone's reloads.
I'm not going to shoot them in any case.
 
Last edited:
. . So I was sold a box of someone's reloads.
I'm not going to shoot them in any case.

Very wise decision ^ ^ ^

There's a lot of pinheads that claim
to be "reloaders " especially on yoofloob.
Lots of unsafe procedures and silly
stuff
As posted ^ ^ previously
Pull em and reuse the primed cases
and bullets for some target loads
 
I’m really surprised it didn’t say “remanufactured” or something to indicate it wasn’t a factory load. If it was a generic white box I’d have been suspicious as I saw these at a gun show once and the price was too good to be true.

While it could be safe, better to tear it down, at least you don’t need to deprime them.
 
Thanks, I found that article, but it made no mention of Lead Round Nose factory loads in +P+.
EDIT: I pulled the box out and looked at every case head. They are a mixed bag of companies, all nickel. So I was sold a box of someone's reloads.
I'm not going to shoot them in any case.

I wouldn't shoot them either.
 
Thank you all for the information.
The old box was torn and I tossed it.
Originally I loaded one of my revolvers, a M36-1 and shot them, and one cartridge FTF with a lightly dimpled primer. I loaded that cartridge in another gun, M10-5 and it fired. They all felt like a standard load.
Only later when I inspected the others and saw the +P+ I worried I could have damaged the M36-1. I'm probably OK there.
I'm not a reloader, but I have been saving all my brass and probably will gather some gear in the future, when my factory stash runs out.
Thanks again!
David
 
The original .38-44 Heavy Duty and Outdoorsman loading was essentially a 158 gr LRN at +P+ pressures, but was never loaded in brass so marked. Later +P+ loads actually marked were 110 gr and 147 gr JHPs. I concur that the topic of this thread are reloads.
 
Thank you all for the information.
The old box was torn and I tossed it.
Originally I loaded one of my revolvers, a M36-1 and shot them, and one cartridge FTF with a lightly dimpled primer. I loaded that cartridge in another gun, M10-5 and it fired. They all felt like a standard load.
Only later when I inspected the others and saw the +P+ I worried I could have damaged the M36-1. I'm probably OK there.
I'm not a reloader, but I have been saving all my brass and probably will gather some gear in the future, when my factory stash runs out.
Thanks again!
David
You mean, you don’t reload YET. ;)
 
The 38spl load I use to protect my treasure was inspired by the treasury, but I use a 125gr bullet and only have a 357, no 38spl guns here.
My home loads are heavy and slow .38Spl. 200gr moving ~750fps from a 3” snubby. It’s a handful but very controllable. I don’t have pressure testing equipment so who knows where it is in the specs. No signs of excessive pressure and it’s a tested book load (Lyman) so it’s probably safe enough for an emergency situation.
Let’s keep that in mind, please: without pressure testing gear, any speculation about loads is just guesswork.
 
I was in a similar situation. There was no way was I gonna pop those rounds off in my revolver.
So I just pulled the bullets, dumped the powder onto the flower bed, and saved the brass & primers.
Melted the pulled bullets in with the lead I used in my next bullet-casting session.
 
When you finally do start reloading for your .38, if you buy a mixed-brass lot of fired cases you will find literally dozens of headstamps and several different cannelure locations on the cases mixed together. I make stacks of mild to medium pressure .38 loads using mixed brass with good results. Just yesterday I located these half-prepped .38 cases on the back of the shelf that needed priming. (The brass ones were done by the time I took the picture.) There must be 30 or more different headstamp/cannelure combos in these coffee containers.

621CCC01-49DD-411D-AB35-A2C59A98566E.jpeg

WCC +P+ or military .38 headstamps are not a common thing to be found today as compared to 25 years ago, but they are still found out there on occasion. :)

Stay safe.
 
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