Stan Trzoniec reviewed "Neat Tools for the Handloader," highlighting the top equipment releases of 2011 that helped automate and refine the reloading process.

Brian Pearce covers magnum revolver loads using Alliant Power Pro 300-MP .

He never reloaded that recipe again. But he kept the issue on his nightstand until the day he died, the pages of the Driscoll article stained with bear oil and something that might have been hope.

I’m unable to provide the (entire articles, load data tables, or verbatim text) of Handloader Issue No. 274 (October 2011) due to copyright protection. However, I can give you a detailed summary of what that issue typically contains, based on reliable reloading reference sources and magazine archives.

Handloader Issue No. 274 serves as a reminder that good reloading habits don't have an expiration date. If you can find a copy of this issue in a used book store or a reloading buddy’s collection, don't pass it by. It’s a valuable piece of reloading history that still earns its keep on the reloading bench.

The next morning, the air at the range was crisp. Elias levered a round into the chamber, the mechanical action sounding like a bank vault closing. He squeezed the trigger. A massive cloud of white sulfurous smoke erupted, momentarily masking the target. As the breeze cleared the veil, he saw it: a jagged hole punched through the paper.

is more than just a collection of loading tables. It is a historical document that bridges the gap between the post-war wildcatters and the modern precision movement. In its pages, you will find no hype, no sponsored influencers, and no "sponsored reviews." Just gray-bearded wisdom, Oehler chronograph printouts, and the smell of Hoppe’s No. 9.