I agree with sasquatch, I have tremors and bottom pour is so much easier, worth dealing with their ( peculiarities) for me. not saying that its for everyone
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I agree with sasquatch, I have tremors and bottom pour is so much easier, worth dealing with their ( peculiarities) for me. not saying that its for everyone
Guess I have been lucky, my Lee 10# pot has been in operation since late 1960s. have never had a problem with it and still going strong.
I had a similar experience several years ago, but with a worse ending. First, let me say I have worked around machinery all my life, and as a result, have the philosophy that "they are all out to bite me". Because of that, I always have the pot sitting in a metal container that will contain the full pot of lead if it malfunctions. When my bottom pour wouldn't shut off, I turned the valve with a screwdriver both ways several times to no effect, then tapped the rod about 4 times, each blow being a little harder. Imagine my excitement when the valve seat popped out the bottom and the pot emptied in about 30 seconds.
I use a Lyman Bottom Pour now. but it still sits in a metal "cake pan". I'm still convinced murphy is alive and well.:lovebooli
I got to put a pan under mine. I can just imagine 20 lbs of lead running all over everything, standing there watching in total disbelief.
The only time I had anything like this happen was after a casting session. I unplugged the pot(Lee Pro 4,20) and started to clean up. The pot was not dripping when I walked away. I came back out to the shop the next morning and had a nice looking puddle of hardened lead under my pot. I'd left a couple pounds in the pot and every bit had drained out.
I pulled it apart and cleaned everything up and his never happened again. That pot has really never even dripped on me. I've had it for about 8 years and cast many thousands of bullets with only that one hiccup.
i keep an ingot mold under my pot to catch drips.. etc.