Thinking of 10 to 13 grains of Unique, ball pushed down till level with the mouth of the case. Do I apply lube over the ball when in case?
Thinking of 10 to 13 grains of Unique, ball pushed down till level with the mouth of the case. Do I apply lube over the ball when in case?
Yes and let me suggest this...... get a cheap .490 round ball mold or buy them at the store, then run them through a sizing die thats about the ID of your fired case mouth. They will shoot very well and not trip the rifling like a round ball will.
Frank
I use 9 gr of Unique with a .457 RB out of a very long barrel. (BC Classic) You are in the right load range.
Where does that "strip the rifling" baloney come from?
BvT
Every lawbreaker we allow into our nation, or tolerate in our citizen population leads to the further escalation of law breaking of all kinds and acceptance of evil.
Since almost all aspects of our cultural existence are LIBERAL in most states, this means that the nation is on a trajectory to dissolution by the burden of toleration and acceptance of LAWBREAKING as a norm, a trajectory back to the dark ages of history.
BvT
Baron, at the risk of speaking on his behalf, I believe he's referring to the circumference of the ball being stripped off as it engages the riflings. If the ball is introduced into the riflings at a higher than acceptable velocity, it can and will happen. With very little bearing surface to loose, it doesn't take much for that to happen.
With all due respect, Sir, it's not baloney, it's fact.
Yes, thank you, Jim.
Your velocity is very limited with exact groove fitting balls. If you use pure or very soft lead, the ball will bump up a little but, if you use hard lead, you will only have about .001 - .003 lenght bearing surface in the groove and a bit more in the land. Try pushing a groove size ball through your barrel with a cleaning rod and look at it. there will be little ingraving on it.
Frank
Last edited by frnkeore; 10-06-2011 at 08:27 PM.
Different cartridge but same idea. I use 0.440" balls sized to 0.434" in my .44 mag Marlin with good results.
The sizing forms a nice "belt" around the equator for a little more rifling engagement per frnkeore and Jim's comments.
These shoot quite well for me over up to about 10 grs. Unique or other fast(ish) pistol powder. The .45-70 is a much larger volume so you might have to increase powder charge a bit but 10 to 13 grs. Unique should git 'er done.
Cheap and fun to shoot.
The collar button is another option and should give better accuracy.
Also, another option is Accurate Molds makes the 45-165C which should be a nice boolit for .45-70. I asked Tom to scale it down to .434" and bought one (43-165-B). It shoots very well out of my Marlin. These seem to tolerate significantly higher velocities than the RB and give very good accuracy to 50 yards anyway. I have to set up and try them at longer range yet. Good little plinkers or lightweight screamers.
Longbow
Thank you for all of the helpful information. I have some collar boolits to try and figure the round ball might be an inexpensive way to enjoy the rifle at short range and gentle recoil. The balls I ould use would be lead and there is some concern about leading. Probably OK if I drive them gentle and spread lots of lube over the boolit?
Also thanks for the mold suggestion as something a little heavier than the collar might be better.
Holt Bodinson used 9 grains of unique over a round ball with 45-70, also .458 Lott. I have a pdf of the article if you want it. Liquid alox, ball pressed into the case.
Doug
Doug,
Send me that article.
Ben
I would also be grateful if you sent a copy of the article to me. I shoot at Racine and Bristol. These in your neck of the woods?
I am in the west central part of the State. I'll see if I can get that to you, I had Ben's email addy.
Doug
Got mine .....Many thanks Doug
Ben
I've shot quite a lot of groove diameter RB in centerfire rifles at reasonable speeds without the alleged stripping. The Bodington reference above bears this kind of thing out. 9/10 grains of unique under a groove diameter RB in 45-70, alox coated, won't strip. I'm speaking of ACTUAL groove diameter, not NOMINAL. Now a BORE or very slightly over diameter, RB is a different creature. IT usually doesn't engage the rifling well. You can't drive it very fast at all. For the same reason that we like .358/.359 bullets for a .357 groove barrel. Alloy your RB to change diameters, as what is stamped on the box is rarely the truth of size.
Stripping suggests less than proper engagement and that's where the BALONEY comes in. Set up a situation of less than proper engagement, then caution about "stripping". Baloney. Properly fit RB do not strip at reasonable velocities, whether round or swaged to form a cylindrical belt. . I use lots of RB for bore measurement purposes and slightly larger than groove diameter RB carefully driven down a lubed bore come out as slick as the barrel finish permits. That is not stripping any more than if resonable velocity is used in firing.
The poster was asking if he should LUBE the ball after it was seated in the case. NO, that is too late for good results.
BvT
Every lawbreaker we allow into our nation, or tolerate in our citizen population leads to the further escalation of law breaking of all kinds and acceptance of evil.
Since almost all aspects of our cultural existence are LIBERAL in most states, this means that the nation is on a trajectory to dissolution by the burden of toleration and acceptance of LAWBREAKING as a norm, a trajectory back to the dark ages of history.
BvT
PB234
I also use a light coat of LLA on the RBs. Older Lyman manuals suggest 5 gr of #6 Pistol powder and I've found 5 gr of Bullseye to work as well. So I use 5 gr Bullseye with a single RB and found it was better for my than any Unique or other powder load. I seat the RBs so the circumferend of the RB is just below the case mouth then a very light roll crimp (if I even bother to crimp) is used to close the case mouth over the RB.
Larry Gibson
I'm intrigued by this round ball idea, and I intend to give it a try this winter after researching a bit.
I have quite a few .457 pure lead balls sitting around right now. By the sounds of it, I gather than it would be more ideal to take a .490 mold and size the ball down to .460 later. I've read that several folks testify that they use .457 for light loads with acceptible levels of success, though.
If I were to use these .457 balls with a few grains of Trail Boss (not quite sure how much - if anyone could suggest a starting load for this, that would be great), would it really be necessary to even lube them? When/where would one apply the lube, and what would be the consequence of not lubing them?
I'm really just looking at this for a light plinking round that could hit a 6 inch steel plate at 25 yards. My only concern is barrel leading, firing a .457 ball in a rifle that I traditionally stick to .458 with (I haven't slugged this gun yet). Should the soft lead obturate to a sufficient degree to seal the grooves?
Thanks for the conversation.
Tallinar,
It all depends on the velocity your looking for. If the load is to light, I doubt if it will bump up even pure lead. If your groove is .458, it's kinda hard to know what you need to do. If you cast with harder lead, the ball might be as large as .4585 but, you'll only know by casting. In any case I would keep the velocity below 1000 fps. Use a fast powder for pure lead like B'eye to try to bump it up and a slower powder for the harder lead, to try not to accelerate it as fast.
For lube, try a 50/50 mix of Vaseline/parrafine, push the ball even with the case mouth and fill the area around the ball.
Frank
I've had good luck using 10 gr. Unique under a .457 RB and in slightly faster 13 gr. loads I add a layer of thermal recept paper as a wad to protect the bottom of the ball and such. Set in place using a Lee expander die as a bullet seater for consistent depth and a kiss from the factory crimp die only. No deformation. W/ 10 grains I get a 6" group at 100 and have killed several ground hogs with it.
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |