Sorry, but I think you missed my point about light loads and H4895. It served as a warning with it, not poor advice. I think this load stuff is for much smaller volume cases, not necessarily a fairly straight walled, large volume case like the 9.3x74R. It may also be the same way with a large case like the 375HH. I had to look up my data from those incidents. It was 2 delayed firings, not all that I loaded did, but after the second one I stopped, went home and pulled the bullets. I was using Norma 232 grain Vulcan bullets, h4895, 48.0 grains. The data from a Lapua load manual for 9.3x74r is attached, for a 286 grain bullet. Using their data for a 286grain bullet (54.9grains max x 60% would be 32.94grains). One would think that 48.0 would’ve been perfectly fine for a 232 grain bullet, as a reduced practice load. I know the bullet has less weight it is also a shorter bullet, but this doesn’t account for 16 more grains of powder being used. It’s just too much volume in this particular case. Same for RL15 in 470ne cases, and I should have used a filler. Just a warning to be dang careful light loading even thou there is data on a particular powder for generic circumstances.Too much poor advice surfacing in this thread. Messing around with reduced pistol powder loads in large capacity cases under jacketed bullets is asking for trouble. No way will a properly prepared and loaded case with proper primer cause a delayed fire in an 80% H48965 load. That sounds like a straw man argument. Proceed as you like but not with any recommendation from me.
Also, Trailboss is a very specialized and bulky/low density powder. That does not mean it is a slow or forgiving powder either. It is a very fast burning, high energy powder, best used in cast bullet loads in high expansion ratio cases and not at all for jacketed loads in large volume, shouldered cases like the 375 HH. Again, proceed as you desire, being warned it may be based on questionable advice!
Here's a link to the 60% Hodgdon data
I guess best advice for OP, the best thing to do is pick a bullet that’s the lightest you may want to use, and call the manufacturer for reduced load data for 375.
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