To my surprise, I looked through my original Speer manual (1994) and found this load in the trapdoor listings for a 400 grain jacketed bullet:
H322 350 JFP 37 grains 1086 fpsBack in March of 2009 I made some of my first loads using a 350 grain jacketed bullet and 45.5 grains of H322. They were pretty stout. This was the minimum load from my Lyman 49 (and Lyman 50) in the Marlin section. This manual shows H322 loads in the trapdoor section as well, and shows:
H322 350 JFP 38.5 grains 1331 fps Varget 350 JFP 45.0 grains 1401 fps Varget 405 LC 42.0 grains 1258 fpsNow, some loads from the Marlin section:
H322 350 JFP 45.0 grains 1552 fps H322 405 LC 43.5 grains 1469 fps Varget 405 LC 49.5 grains 1591 fpsThe burn rate chart in my Lyman 50 shows H322 as a significantly faster powder than Varget. H322 is near H4198 and Benchmark on the chart and is even faster than H335.
Varget 300 LC 45.0 grains 1599 fps Varget 300 SIE 57.0 grains 1770 fpsThe above is a poor comparison as the jacketed load is clearly more aggressive.
IMR-3031 300 LC 51.7 grains 1839 fps IMR-3031 300 SIE 56.0 grains 1884 fpsAnd:
IMR-8208 300 LC 51.2 grains 1723 fps IMR-8208 300 SIE 54.0 grains 1728 fpsHere we have two loads that give the same velocity for jacketed and lead bullets. Note that the powder charge for lead is 4.3 grains less and 2.8 grains less respectively, compared to the jacketed.
So a person might conclude that he could reduce a jacketed charge by 3 grains for a lead bullet and get similar velocities as published for a jacketed bullet of the same weight.
Consider the H322 load we started with. We could load 37 grains of powder under a 350 grain lead bullet and see what velocities we get. We could also load 34 grains (3 grains less) and see what results that gives.
The book may be worth the money paid for the articles up in the front rather than load data.
I was doing searches on whether jacketed bullet loads could be used for cast lead bullets of the same weight, and people kept recommending the CBH (rather than answering the question). The answer seems to be, that in almost all cases you can use a jacketed load for a cast lead bullet, but definitely not the other way around. You can probably reduce the jacketed load by a grain or two for use with a cast bullet. But there are risks any time you aren't using a published load, so don't say that I didn't warn you.
I had thought that Varget and H322 might be comparable, but they definitely are not.
I am quite interested in the 37 grain H322 load for a 350 grain Jacketed bullet and will probably try it with some of my 350 grain Berry's plated bullets.
Tom's Computer Info / tom@mmto.org