Reloading Shotgun for Tungsten - Guidance?

Joined
Mar 27, 2019
Messages
920
Location
Lyon County, NV
Looking for a little guidance on where to start in reloading 12ga for tungsten shot. I've been experimenting with various companies' loaded shells on ducks, and have decided it's the way I want to go. It's been hammering waterfowl in ways steel and bismuth just don't, and the cost of the TSS is worth it to me to have far fewer cripples, given how little opportunity I have to actually get into birds here in Nevada.

I reload pistol and a little rifle on a Dillon 550, but have zero experience with loading shotgun. I wasn't interested in it at all until experiencing the TSS shells in the field, and now looking into the cost/benefit of rolling my own. More importantly though is that I want to be able to work up and tailor my own loads.

So, given all that, what should I be looking for in a good reloading machine? What should I watch out for? Quality matters, but at the same time I'd likely be handloading less than 300 rounds a year with it. Probably half that at best.

Any experience loading TSS you could share?
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2021
Messages
832
Location
Upstate NY
I used to load Hevishot when we duck hunted a lot 20 years ago. With the volume you are looking at you can get a basic single stage press like a Mec 600 Jr. We were used to using 3-1/2" 12ga steel shot loads for ducks and geese and had a hard time wrapping our heads around using #4 Hevishot in 2-3/4" shells crushing birds. Looking at the newer TSS stuff, I would stick with the 2-3/4" shells and use #6-#7 shot probably, 1-1/8oz loads with some speed.
 
Joined
Feb 24, 2016
Messages
2,603

Here you go. This IS the answer to your problems. For the amount you are going to reload, this will suffice. I have reloaded THOUSANDS of shells with one of these.
 
Joined
Jan 12, 2024
Messages
449
Location
Gulf Coast
I recently bought a MEC 600 Jr.
Havent set it up yet as it's hunting season but should
have it rolling by next season.
Was planning on loading Bismuth but may try Tungsten.
 
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
9,746
Location
Shenandoah Valley
In a 12 GA for waterfowl, you will want to duplex with steel for tss.


I'd look at Bucks Run and go the hw13 route.


Understand that loading shotshell is different than metallic, you don't work up loads, you don't swap components, little changes can make big pressure swings.


Find good data, then pick what you want. Play with wads, how they are cut, and chokes. That's about as much as you can do.

I use Mec and PW, the PW is nice because of how it supports the shell, sometimes the mec takes a little playing and adjusting to get the crimp right.

Really for the volume you are looking at, might just roll crimp.
 

Bluefish

WKR
Joined
Jan 5, 2023
Messages
688
For low volume tss loading a mec Jr is my choice. Find a recipe and follow it exactly. Then go shoot. Hal Abbot, aka hawglips is the tss guru.
 

Dryfly1

FNG
Joined
Sep 12, 2014
Messages
28
My best advice is to buy your shot from someone who will provide you with tested load data. Shotgun loading is different from pistol/rifle. 12 gauge TSS is way overkill for ducks and geese. Many people are killing ducks with 28 gauge and 410s. The 28s are duplexed with steel 4. I just load for turkey and don't even use a loader. Just a drill press to roll crimp the shells. 20 gauge 2 &3/4 with an ounce and a half 0f 9 shot will kill turkeys way farther than they should be shot. I have yet to use this on ducks or geese but have heard/read that the results are devastating on geese at 50 yards. The biggest hurdle will be obtaining the proper components. Good luck and be careful. You don't mix and match like metallic reloading.

2GBL
 

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