I have a K hornet and 2 or 3 22 hornets. I have not chronographed the K hornet, so I really don't know what I am getting for the effort. 1. any favorite loads. 2. Is case life really improved? 3. Advice on case forming?
@dlmac
After using a K Hornet for 10 years I have found the following.
Case attrition with new Remington cases ( the only brand I use) runs around 30-35%.
To avoid this I run all my new cases thru with a 7mm tapered expander in my die.
Then replace with the standard .224 recapping rod and full length size. This does two thing. Firstly expands the neck and shoulder area then when resized in a K Hornet die puts a false shoulder in it and it comes out looking like a mostly formed case. Doing this cases loss went to zero.
I then anneal after first firing.
In my particular rifle I used cheap 45 fn projectiles and the max load for the standard Hornet. These were very accurate and cases came out perfectly.
The load I settled on for my K Hornet was the 40gn V Max and12 gn of ADI2295/ H110 this gave me very close to 3,000fps and sub half inch groups, 3 shots can be covered by the base of a Hornet case. This load is dynamite on little critters and has also accounted for a few wild dogs with behind the shoulder chest shots.
Unfortunately my gunsmith out a slow twist barrel in my rifle and it won't stabilise 50 grainers but the little V Max are great.
I did try win296 whilst it gave good rest it was a very dirty powder .
Others have had good success with Hodgons Lil' Gun but I found no matter what load I used velocity was all over the shop from 2,800fos to 3,600 fps. Admittedly that was only 4 shots but that was enough for me. I knew it wasn't a chrono error because I run 5 shot of 22 subsonic over it to check before doing any testing. Thing is NO CASES showed any sign of excess pressure , strange. Admit it was a hot day and it's supposed to be a temp sensitive powder but not that bad.
Those little VMax fly very fat ( for a Hornet) and I have no result landing shots in a fix head target at 250yds or popping soda cans at 300 .
A great little round but does need attention to detail.
Bob