380 auto

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Depends on how much you shoot it. If you put hundreds of rounds through it, then yeh sure it's worth it.
But if it's a gun you just plink with every now and then, the money it would cost setting up for the calibre might be better spent on buying a bunch of ammo at a good price.
Just my thoughts anyways.
 
I enjoy reloading 380 auto. I often use 115 grain bullets, same as my 9mm pistols, so I can buy bulk.

I'd love to tell you more, but it's almost midnight and we've had 2 or 3 threads on this subject in the last 90 days. Maybe you can find our posts in one of those threads.

Best of luck, cowboy. Go have fun with it.
 
Only for a PPK

It only likes Round Nose bullets. Other than that, it's very forgiving. I prefer cast bullets because of cost.

CDD
 
Since I carry a .380 on occasion as a CCW piece, I tend to practice with it quite a bit; therefore, I reload for it. I buy bulk 95 grain FMJ bullets, pick up my empties and any others I can find at the range (most folks don't reload .380) and load up large batches at a time with whatever primer and appropriate powder I have left over from shot shell reloading....then I'm usually set for a while.

might be better spent on buying a bunch of ammo at a good price.

When was the last time you saw a bunch of ANY ammo at a good price? Cost just keeps on going up from where I'm sitting..........
 
My wife has a Bersa 380 that she likes to shoot so I reload quite a bunch of the little rascals. They are hard to seperate from the 9mm if you pick up both calibers at the range. Otherwise, Winchester 95grn FP bullets with Accurate no.2 or tightgroup work well.
 
I reload for .380 using a 95 grain lead, copper washed bullet over 2.9 grains of HP-38 for plinking. It feels like a .22 when shot but is able to cycle both my Beretta M85FS and Makarov in .380 fine. If I carry .380 for SD I load with Corbon factory stuff.
 
i made up 200 rounds yesterday. very feasable. if you have questions, pm me and i will do my best to answer them. if you already reload, it is no big deal. if you do not, consider how much you shoot it first. it will take a long time to recouperate the investment money if you only shoot 5 or 10 boxes a year.
 
I have a Makarov, a PPK and a HK-4, all in .380. I reload an ammo can of cartridges about once a year, using the 95 grain copper-washed RN bullet.

The cost of the dies is long forgotten.:)
 
For those of you who are using lead/copper washed bullets, I have a question for you: Where/who are you getting your bullets from?
Thanks in advance..............
 
Berry's Bullets from Graf's.

Yep. .380 loads fairly easily. The only complaint is that it's easy to get the 9mm Luger and .380 brass mixed together if you pick up range brass, so you need to be fully alert when you reload. (You should be alert anyway).:scrutiny:

I often carry a Mak in .380, so I shoot it often. I was surprised to find that the Mak is way more accurate than I'd thought - and is very handy - so I have fun with it at the range.

Berry's bullets are pretty good, and I buy mine from www.grafs.com. As another poster said, yes, you can use up to 115 grains if you like. I load 380 and 9mm back to back in my Dillon 550B, because I don't have to adjust much when I swap from one to the other.

I don't find reloading 380 any more difficult than most calibers.
 
380's are one of the very few loads I have memorized. 4.0 grns of Unique 90 grn JHP from seirra, cci primers, .984 col. Easy to do and accurate.

Check your own loading book before trusting my memory. I use a seirra book myself.
 
No, reloading .380's isn't worth it. Please send all your empty brass to me and I'll see that it gets properly disposed of.
 
No, reloading .380's isn't worth it. Please send all your empty brass to me and I'll see that it gets properly disposed of.

You can send some my way too.:neener:

I reload .380 all the time using Berry's 95Gr bullets and 3.1Gr of Hodgdon Universal powder. That combo seems to shoot good in my Kel-Tec, Llama IIIA, And Bersa .380.
 
I took my first .380 reloads to the range at lunch today. Fun! I definitely need to keep working up, though. I shot a couple of factory rounds for comparison and I'm not getting as much punch yet.

I'm using Unique and 95 gr. Magtech bullets. Still working on it, though.
 
The .380 is an easy case to reload, but I do offer a word of caution with the .380. The case capacity is very small and when using bullets heavier than 95 grains, care should be taken not to compress the powder charge. This will result in high pressures that are hard on small guns. Most 380's are only locked by the weight of slide and spring pressure. Even when there is a lock up as in the Keltec and its ruger copy, there is no real reason to construct overcharged loads for these small guns.

When I was a lot younger I use to load 125 grain luger bullets with the lightest charge that would function a Mauser Hsc pistol that I used to own. A full powder charge for a 95 grain slug would have been dangerous with that overweight bullet. The load would not work in a savage .380 that a friend had due to its overlength being too long to fit in the savage magazine.
I found out accidently that that load would also function in a friends 9mm parabellum caliber Astra 600 pistol ejecting a very bulged out case.
 
My 2 cent's worth. I noticed that someone else uses 115 grain bullets. These are good and accurate, just don't load them too heavy as the little pistols are recoil-operated and heavy loads might damage them. I have used HP-38, Universal, and Bullseye with good results, I think Bullseye is my fav. The Winchester, H-P, and CBC cases are good. The CCI, Federal and some others are too thick near the base and you won't be able to seat the 115 grain bullet deep enough for max OAL, especially for hollow points.
 
"The CCI, Federal and some others are too thick near the base and you won't be able to seat the 115 grain bullet deep enough for max OAL, especially for hollow points."

I use to pick up once fired cases and as long as they would chamber in my barrel I would use them without full length resizing. Knockout the old primer, reprime, load powder, and then seat & crimp a 125 grain lead bullet. The greater thickness of the case near the base would would prevent the bullet from going backwards. Saved one step in the reloading process.
 
I took my first .380 reloads to the range at lunch today. Fun! I definitely need to keep working up, though. I shot a couple of factory rounds for comparison and I'm not getting as much punch yet.

if you are just paper punching, you dont need a lot of punch! and you can save money. less powder = more loads per pound. as long as the gun cycles fine, and you keep them seperate from your personal defense loads!
 
Does Anyone Reload 380 Or Has Reloaded 380 ??? Good, Bad, Feasible or Not,
ETC... THANKS
It depends on how much money you have... At current component prices I can reload a box of 50 using a 95gr lead bullet for $4.83. Can you buy a box for that price? Can you buy a box for 3X that price? I think not so like I said, it depends on how much money you have... Last time I looked the local shop was charging over $18 a box for Remington UMC or Winchester White Box .380 Auto ammo. You can probably save 75% by reloading. (or should I say shoot 200 rounds instead of 50 for the same price because we never save money reloading, we just get to shoot a lot more for the same price!!)
 
I load 95gr lead RN bullets at about 800 fps for light target practice, and 100gr Hornady FMJ-Enc bullets at about 925 fps to duplicate standard factory fodder. Speer's 90gr GDHPs and Hornady's 90gr HP/XTPs are easily loaded to equal their factory counterparts. I've also played around a bit with the Remington 102gr GSHPs, but not enough to make a firm recommendation yet.

The best powders I've found for my setup (Lee Classic Cast Turret with the Pro Auto Disk) are AA #2, VV N310, VV N320, and VV N330.
 
There is a rain cloud over my head

I am embarrassed to admit it, but looks like I'm the only one here that is having a horrible time loading .380.

I can't get the bullets to go in straight, and the case bulges on one side so they won't go into my max dimension gauge.

With my 9mm loading, when I bell the case, i can seat the bullet and it won't move. I can seat the bullet by hand with just enough tension so that I can practically hold the case horizontal and the bullet will stay.

I can't do this with the .380. I'm at the point where I'm at max bell before the case by itself won't fit in the gauge, and the bullet will move unless I bionic man slow mo move the press handle.
I make about 10 duds for every good round.

About every other week I sit down and try to give it another go and figure out what the heck I'm screwing up on. I'm about to give up forever.

Unlike the posters above though, even though I've been loading 9mm for years, I classify myself as a very inexperienced loader. I found one setup that worked, and never deviated. 380 is my first adventure into something else. Anyways, thought I'd give an experience to contrast everybody elses peachy keen ones.
 
Sounds to me like you need more bell. Bell it larger to get the bullet to seat correctly then make sure you remove the bell with the crimp.
 
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