I test fired my Smith & Wesson Model 33 lately to the tune of ten shots. The revolver came with four boxes of 50 rounds each of ammo. Two of the boxes were handloads into old primed Winchester brass. I took one of the handloads apart, it was a cast bullet and what seemed like a reasonable (if unknown) load of powder for the round. So I did what we're never supposed to do, I fired somebody else's reloads. I did know who made them. It was Jim Skochenko, he sold reloads at the WAC gun shows in Puyallup for years. I never heard of any blow-ups from his stuff. He was semi-professional whether or not he had a license.
Anyway, so I fired off these ten rounds, all went well, the gun did well. Of course now I had ten empties. I'd thought about getting a set of .38 S&W (not Special) dies to reload for this gun. But I was thinking back to when I concocted some rimmed 9mm Luger cartridges for 9mm revolvers (copying the 9mm Federal). Then I snooped around on the internet a bit. And here is what I came up with. I don't need .38 S&W dies. I used a .38 Super sizing die, then a 9mm Luger flaring die, then a .38 Super bullet seating die. Which only works if you already have .38 Super and 9mm Luger die sets. I already had some Matt's Bullets .359 bullets from another project, so I used those. Which was very close to what Skochenko used in the handloads, those were around .3595. Which worked well and didn't leave any lead in the bore. No, I haven't slugged the bore and if Matt's Bullets work out okay, I won't need to. Actually, Matt's Bullets will size them whatever you specify.
The older (estimated 1960's) Winchester primed (and sealed) .38 S&W brass was interesting. Pink color, higher copper content than "normal" golden cartridge brass we are used to seeing. No head stamp, completely blank, including as to caliber. I suspect they were foreign made even back then. Winchester doesn't necessarily make all their own brass. Or even all their ammo. I saw some Win. brand white box 7.62x25 ammo not too many years ago, it said "Made in Czech Republic."
Anyway, so I fired off these ten rounds, all went well, the gun did well. Of course now I had ten empties. I'd thought about getting a set of .38 S&W (not Special) dies to reload for this gun. But I was thinking back to when I concocted some rimmed 9mm Luger cartridges for 9mm revolvers (copying the 9mm Federal). Then I snooped around on the internet a bit. And here is what I came up with. I don't need .38 S&W dies. I used a .38 Super sizing die, then a 9mm Luger flaring die, then a .38 Super bullet seating die. Which only works if you already have .38 Super and 9mm Luger die sets. I already had some Matt's Bullets .359 bullets from another project, so I used those. Which was very close to what Skochenko used in the handloads, those were around .3595. Which worked well and didn't leave any lead in the bore. No, I haven't slugged the bore and if Matt's Bullets work out okay, I won't need to. Actually, Matt's Bullets will size them whatever you specify.
The older (estimated 1960's) Winchester primed (and sealed) .38 S&W brass was interesting. Pink color, higher copper content than "normal" golden cartridge brass we are used to seeing. No head stamp, completely blank, including as to caliber. I suspect they were foreign made even back then. Winchester doesn't necessarily make all their own brass. Or even all their ammo. I saw some Win. brand white box 7.62x25 ammo not too many years ago, it said "Made in Czech Republic."