Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

CCI is known in the shooting sports industry for producing reliable ammunition that delivers exceptional performance shot after shot. CCI shotshell ammunition is no exception. These loads are designed as a potent round for close range pest control and work well for dispatching nuisance vermin. These loads work great as rat shot, snake shot and close range plinking. These rounds work great in revolvers, but they may not function properly in semi-automatic firearms. Do not use these or any other shot cartridge in handguns having ported recoil compensators. This ammunition is new production and non-corrosive.

  • Caliber: .45 Colt
  • Bullet Style: 150gr #9 Shot
  • Case Type: Aluminum Casing
  • Muzzle Velocity: 1000 fps
  • Muzzle Energy: NA
  • Quantity: 10/Box

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

CCI shotshells for handguns larger than .22 caliber usually contain #9 shot (far right). Roger used the same #12s used in .22 shotshells (center right) instead. “CCI also offers Big 4 shotshells, loaded with #4s (far left). If loading your own, you can use #6s (center left) or any other size.

When I recently decided I needed (okay, wanted) some CCI .45 Colt shotshells, I was shocked at the price of $1.60 per cartridge! I recovered enough to choke up the dough for a few of the traditional ones loaded with #9 shot, plus some of their new Big #4 shot versions.

However, I’m a crafty cheapskate reloader, so while I was shopping, I also found some of those Speer blue plastic shot capsules only costing 18 cents each. Why couldn’t I make my own?

The cost savings would be compelling, and another benefit of loading your own is being able to choose your own shot size. The standard load of 140 grains of #9s in the factory CCI load figures out to about 186 pellets, and the Big 4 load in .45 Colt only contains 40. Number 6 shot has long been regarded as an excellent bunny popper and pheasant dropper. Why not a load of 75 of those pellets? Or 120-140 of clay pigeon-busting #7½s or 8s?

Do keep in mind rifled barrels are famous for scattering shot like mad, limiting effective range to a maximum of about 15 feet. I did my testing at 10. In Speer’s Handloading Manual Number 15, they caution the higher the velocity, the faster the shot spreads out. Photos of the targets comparing loads using 7.5 grains of Unique at an advertised 975 fps and 5.5 grains of Bullseye at 875 fps illustrate this quite clearly.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Left, a 0.475" O.D. with six grains of Unique topped with a Hornady .44 caliber gas check, cup side up, and 180 grains of #12 shot. Needle nose tweezers help seat the check. Center, a Hornady .45 caliber gas check squeezed down to 0.452" in a Lee bullet sizing die on top of the shot. Right, a roll crimp holds everything in place.

Shot Supply

It’s easy enough to open some inexpensive shotgun shells for their shot. A box of 25 one-ounce loads will make about 70 .45 Colt shotshells. This sure beats buying a 25-lb. bag of shot just to experiment. Alternatively, shot in sizes 10, 11 and 12 is available in 10-lb. bags for just under 40 bucks from Midway USA and Ballistic Products.

I chose to start out with #12 shot. The rationale being, if 31 grains of #12s in a .22LR or 52 grains in a .22WMR are sold as bad medicine for mice and snakes, why not 155 grains of them coming out of my .45? Think about a whole cloud of more than 800 pellets, compared to about 163 from a .22LR and 273 from a .22WMR. I think the targets shown will confirm my theory.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Left, CCI .22 shotshell, Ruger Single Six, 6" barrel; Center, CCI .38/.357 shotshell,
Ruger GP100, 4" barrel; Right, CCI .45 factory shotshell filled with #9 shot,
Ruger Blackhawk 4⅝" barrel.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Left, Speer shot capsule with 155.6 grains #12 shot, 7.5 grains Unique. Advertised velocity 975 fps.
Center, same as target at left with 5.5 grains of Bullseye. Advertised velocity 875 fps. Right, Roger’s
Lucky #13 load. All targets at 10 feet using Ruger Blackhawk with 4⅝" barrel. More velocity results in
larger shot patterns.

Who Needs Shot Cups?

But what if you can’t get your hands on either factory loads or Speer capsules? As Speer says, “Historically, making handgun shotshells for close-range pest control was usually more trouble than it was worth. Loading the various components was tedious, and the resulting ammo usually performed poorly.” To which I can only say “Amen.”

For me, the first requirement is the load not lose its shot while riding in a cylinder otherwise full of standard power cartridges. Some like to load shot in the first one or two chambers ready to be fired, then just rotate past them if they choose to shoot bullets first instead of shot. A shot cartridge must be able to withstand firing five rounds of bullets without spilling its guts. CCI factory cartridges can do this with ease.

I spent several days spilling powder and shot, trying various components, wrecking perfectly good cases and creating loads that vomited when I shot 255-grain lead bullets.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

Both targets on ground at 10 feet. Left, CCI factory load using #9 shot. Right, Load #13 filled with #12 shot. 3½" Ruger Vaquero used for both.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

The longer the barrel, the larger the shot pattern. Top row, CCI factory load.
Bottom row, Roger’s Lucky #13 load. Left 3½" barrel. Right, 7½" barrel.

Solution? Gas Checks!

The solution lies in using copper gas checks for over-powder and over-shot cards, but there’s a hitch. Gas checks for .45 Colt are 0.460" diameter. Brand-new factory brass is usually 0.474" outside diameter, which means about 0.454" inside at the mouth, then tapering still smaller toward the base of the case as it thickens inside. So how can this work? The secrets are to use a 0.439" diameter .44 caliber gas check for the over-powder card, and to push those 0.460" gas checks through a Lee 0.452" bullet sizer for the overshot cards.

Grins finally arrived on the scene with Load #13. It consists of using fired cases trimmed to 1.270" and resized in a die that leaves them 0.475" in diameter, then generously neck flared. Power comes from six grains of Unique topped with the .44 gas check, cup side up. Using 180 grains of #12 shot leaves a 0.452" gas check 0.035"–0.040" below the top of the flared case mouth, cup side down.

This ensures crimping doesn’t compress the powder charge, which is dangerous with pistol powders.

Using a Hornady die, a roll crimp that reduces case mouth size to 0.405"–0.410" holds everything in place. A faint shot rattle assures me I haven’t compressed the powder charge. To me, it’s the near-perfect home-made .45 Colt shotshell. The imperfection is I’m probably going to get significant barrel leading from the soft lead shot. However, Kano Kroil does an excellent job of floating this stuff loose.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

The .45 Colt shot cartridge by UMC in the middle, from 1884, uses a hollow wooden bullet to hold the shot. It came to me from collector Joe St. Charles from Billings, MT, who shares his surplus on Gunbroker.com as Old West Cartridges.

Where to buy 45 long colt snake shot

The Winchester .45-70 round in the rear dates from the earliest days of that cartridge and
issued by the Army as a foraging round for soldiers to supplement lousy G.I. rations. The UMC
.45 Colt (center) dates to 1884, and came to Roger from collector Joe St. Charles of Billings, MT.

The Easy Life

My advice? When you finally get lucky and find some Speer shot capsules in stock somewhere, just buy a lifetime supply and be done with it. The capsules are inexpensive, easy to use and don’t lead the barrel. They’re undersized, however, so sizing your cases in a die that squeezes them down to the 0.468″ (RCBS Cowboy) to 0.470″ (Lee) diameter range will reduce capsule slippage and make accurate seating easier.

Fill the capsules with whatever you prefer and use the Speer-recommended charge of 5.5 grains of Bullseye. The only way I know of to obtain sufficient roll crimp to keep them in place is to increase the crimp on one until it breaks. Then back your crimping die off ¼ to no more than ½ turn to make up the rest of them.

Homemades like mine are more fiddly diddly to make up than using the capsules. Then again, they do shoot well, nothing breaks and spills shot while loading them, and they hold 15% more #12 shot than the capsules. You can always make up some of each and see which you prefer.
I’m still comparing and thinking, because they’re both so good I probably never will come to a conclusion.

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What is the 45 Long Colt good for?

45 Colt cartridge remains in use 149 years after its introduction. It is used as a hunting load on animals the size of deer and black bear. Heavier handloads will take the same range of big game animals as the . 44 Magnum.

Is a 45 Long Colt more powerful than a 45 ACP?

A typical 45 Long Colt cartridge has a 250 grain bullet and 860 fps muzzle velocity, giving it 411 ft lbs muzzle energy. In comparison, a standard 45 ACP cartridge has a 230 grain bullet and 850 fps muzzle velocity, giving it 369 ft lbs muzzle energy.

Is the 45 Long Colt a good cartridge?

In terms of accuracy, the . 45 Colt gets great marks overall. From a Colt Single Action Army clone (Uberti Cattleman 1873), the 250-grain load shoots well. It is a very well-mannered cartridge, and easy to score solid hits with.

How powerful is a 45 Long Colt?

45 Colt has a muzzle energy of 369 foot-pounds (ft-lbs); after 50 yards holds 343 ft-lbs of energy. The 240-grain . 44 Magnum is listed at over twice the muzzle energy (806 ft-lbs) and has 665 ft-lbs after 50 yards. The MagTech 250-grain .