I have been working on this project for some time now and thought it might be interesting for the forum to hear the report.
I have wanted a 10mm for a long time, but I did not want a glock, I already had a 1911, and did not trust Tanfoglio.
After some searching, I learned about the 40 super, which is a wildcat cartridge that uses common 45 acp platforms with a barrel and spring change. I did not have a Sig, and learning that the Sig 200 45 acp was one of the original platforms for the conversion, I decided to go that direction.
I bought a used West German 220 on gunbroker for $550; it was in excellent, almost new shape. I then asked www.efkfiredragon.com about conversion barrels. They keep the 400 corbon conversion barrel in stock for $190, but they used to produce the 40 super, so they agreed to prepare the 40 super for $245. Not bad for a very high quality stainless barrel. It is extended and ported. It took about 60 days for the production.
Starline makes the brass, and Redding makes the dies ($68 at Midwayusa).
The EFk Firedragon barrel dropped right in. I used the same recoil rod but used the strongest recoil spring for the 220.
It actually took a long time to work up the loads. The available information suggests using slow pistol powders such as Accurate #9 and h110, but these proved too slow. I tried HS longshot, 800x, and finally settled on HS-7, a powder no longer in production. This is the same powder that I had great success with on my other bottleneck experiments--7.62x25 and 32 NAA.
Using 165 grain fmj and Golden Sabres, I slowly worked up the loads. I used CCI small rifle primers. The HS-7 power curve or burn rate seemed just right. It did not recoil abruptly like the longshot or #9, but had a slow workup, more like the 45 acp than my other 40 s&ws.The recoil was less than my CZ 40s and slightly sharper but less perceived recoil than with the 45 acp barrel in the 220. The porting makes a big difference.
I ended up with a load of 14.2 grains with the 165 gr golden sabres. This load averaged just under 1400 fps, with a fairly low standard deviation. That makes for about 700 foot pounds of energy, lots of momentum, and a high KO number. When I pushed the load up above 1400 to 1425, I began to get some pressure signs with the primers. This performance is equal to or slightly above the 10mm. I have achieved my goal.
I have not done accuracy tests, but they should be fine.
Here are some pictures.
