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Thread: Making GC

  1. #1
    Boolit Bub
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    Making GC

    Hello!
    I have read that some of you make your own gas checks. Does it work well?
    Do somebody no some cheap die for produce GC?
    I have an ide of making GC off hard wax paper, have sombody already tryed it?

  2. #2
    Boolit Mold Machado's Avatar
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    Styrofoam gas checks seem to work well. Bell and de-burr a case until mouth is sharp, drill a hole through the primer pocket such that you can push a wooden dowel through it, twirl case against styrofoam tray and bingo, there's your gas check. When case is full push checks out shoving dowel through primer pocket.

  3. #3
    Boolit Grand Master
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    In your attempts to produce something that duplicates the effect of a metal gascheck, always ensure that the product of your labors does not fall off the base of the bullet.

    Airspace between your pseudo-check and the bullet is a bad thing.

    However, having the quasi-check remain on the bullet may also spoil accuracy. Only way to know is to try it, and you may wish to remove lubricant from the base of the bullet so it does NOT stick.

    A check of metal may be fabricated out of other materials and affixed to the base of the bullet. Do a search on this board; some of the other members have devised their own methods. Send 'em a PM.

    Various fillers and wax wads will help reduce or eliminate gascutting of the bullet, but seem to have a velocity limit lower than a proper metal check.

  4. #4
    Boolit Master
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    I never had much luck with the waxes, and they can kill the load in hot weather, probably not a problem in northern Sweden. A substantial column of cornmeal filler worked well in a .45-70 I once owned, but not in my current ones.

    Wads cut from discarded offset printing blankets show some promise, but are only suitable for straightwall or long necked cases. The wad needs to be far enough inside the neck so you don't have to worry about it working loose. I would not expect these wads to work with a GC design bullet, but they do add several hundred fps to the accurate velocity of PB bullets. Since the blankets are cloth backed neoprene, sticking does not seem to be a problem with the cloth against the base of the bullet.

    I've only piddled with this out of curiosity. It's a lot easier for me to buy gas checks.
    Sometimes you gotta wonder if democracy is such a good idea.

  5. #5
    Banned Bucks Owin's Avatar
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    Seems to me there was a thread involving making GCs from aluminum cans somewhere...

    Maybe it was on a different forum....

    Dennis

    (One thing I'm sure of, I'm tired of paying more for a lousy GC than I do for a primer! Something wrong with that picture....)

  6. #6
    Boolit Grand Master



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    The tools for making your own gas checks are extremely expensive. Couple that with the serious amounts of time involved and I lost all interest in pursuing that.

    What I HAVE done, however, is limit my gas checks to areas that I really need them. I DON'T need them on any pistol or revolver laods including my magnums. Of course, I consider my TC Contenders to be "short rifles" and you may find me using them there (.221 Fireball, .30 Carbine, etc). I use them in rifles where necessary. However, where they are not needed I do NOT use them. Saves a world of time and I have been fortunate to have few accuracy problems. Leading has never been a problem for me, so I have little knowledge of how to remove lead, etc. I tend to observe closely when using a new toy, to see where the "edge" is. I try never to exceed the "edge" (the place where accuracy leaves and leading starts). Since accuracy almost always leaves before leading starts, it is not so hard to "slide up to the edge"...

    Of course, one of these days I will have to eat my words (words like "absolute", "never", and "No problem for me"etc). Until then, I will just use plain base when I can and buy commercial checks when I need them.

    Dale53
    Last edited by Dale53; 07-01-2006 at 04:19 PM.

  7. #7
    Banned Bucks Owin's Avatar
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    Barefoot....

    I have discovered that shooting a GC boolit "barefoot" seems to work OK with the right alloy. At least with "some" bullets like the .44 cal RCBS 225 gr when shot at around 1200 fps...

    I haven't tried to really push on this bullet without a GC so I don't know how it would work at 1500 fps, guess I'll have to try it some time. (When I load it "to the max" I've always used a GC on it)

    I think that there's a correlation in there somewhere between pressure and velocity and that velocity alone doesn't determine the need for a gascheck....

    (But I've been wrong before!)

    FWIW,

    Dennis

  8. #8
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    .............Starmetal made a set of tools for punching out GC's from aluminum flashing. It's over on the "Special Projects" forum. The tools are fairly simple, as is the process. The issue is that it IS a 'One at a Time' proposition. I suppose if you did it while sitting in front of the idiot box it would make your TV watching time not such a worthless endeavor.

    ..............Buckshot
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  9. #9
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    Dennis

    I think gaschecked bullets shot without the check do ok in handguns, but fail more so in rifles.

    Joe

  10. #10
    Boolit Bub
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    Thanks for your replys.
    I use about 8000 GC a year and here in Sweden the price will be in store 40 to 45 US $ for 1000(Hornady).
    I dont think it is so isy make 1000 with a hand die. Maybe it better to find cheeper brands.
    In Sweden i have seen rcbs and hornady gc, is it more factorys who produce gc in US?

  11. #11
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    My experience is much the same as Joe stated. My .38/.357 revolvers are quite happy shooting the 358156 boolit without the gaschecks, and my .44s did likewise with 429244 without the checks. Our peestols have munched down on many thousands so-loaded over the years. These days, I mostly load RCBS 38-150 and 44-250 KT, both being plain-base designs. I do have a 4-cavity 358156, so the temptation to cast a BUNCH of 358156 boolits is still there.

    On a direct-comparison test with a .30-06 rifle a couple years ago, a very moderate-speed 311291 load grouped five in 1.5" WITH gaschecks, and well over a foot for five rounds WITHOUT gaschecks...same load, same day, same everything except the GC. I don't need much more in the way of a hint!
    Regards from BruceB in Nevada

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  12. #12
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    Sven,

    Use to be Lyman made their own and Hornady made theirs and there weren't any RCBS ones. Now it's said that Hornayd makes them all. The forum had a group buy on Gator Checks while back and they are made by someone entirely different. They will have the group buy again sometime and maybe you can get in on it.

    Corbin makes some gascheck tools that are pretty darn good, but also pretty expensive. The way they are set up for press use I believe they will chop them out pretty fast.

    Joe

  13. #13
    Banned Bucks Owin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by StarMetal
    Dennis

    I think gaschecked bullets shot without the check do ok in handguns, but fail more so in rifles.

    Joe
    I'm sure that's true. I was referring to HG loads....
    And even with .357 loads I've had some problems with barefoot boolits. Bigger bores seem more "tolerant"...

    I haven't "enjoyed" shooting any rifle loads yet....(soon!) I'm still rounding up molds, dies, GCs etc...

    Dennis

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sven Dufva
    Thanks for your replys.
    I use about 8000 GC a year and here in Sweden the price will be in store 40 to 45 US $ for 1000(Hornady).
    I dont think it is so isy make 1000 with a hand die. Maybe it better to find cheeper brands.
    In Sweden i have seen rcbs and hornady gc, is it more factorys who produce gc in US?
    ...............Heck if the exchange rate were favorable, a couple thousand (loose in a plastic bag) could go in the smaller USPS International flat rate envelope for US$4.50. Label the customs declaration as metal punch scrap.

    .................Buckshot
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  15. #15
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance Four Fingers of Death's Avatar
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    I remember reading an article in an aussie gunmag years ago and a guy used to spray boolits with Birchwood Casey Polyurethane Stock Finish, then turn them over and spray the bases. I never got around to trying it. It would be similar to the plastic/telfon commercial cast boolits on sale in Australia I suppose.

    I must try it in the 1911 as you can weight the bbl separately and determine if their is any build up, etc. Mick.
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  16. #16
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    Mick,

    I don't thing the gascheck idea is as much for protectiing the base of the bullet, but to seal off the gas from trying to get past the bullet. Long time ago one of the gunrags recommended cuting disks from the plastic lids of coffee cans for handgun bullets. I tried it and the barrel seemed alittle cleaner, but not enough worth the effort. I believe it's the edge of the bullet base that you have to protect or seal, not any of base more toward the center of the bullet.

    Joe

  17. #17
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by Buckshot
    ...............Heck if the exchange rate were favorable, a couple thousand (loose in a plastic bag) could go in the smaller USPS International flat rate envelope for US$4.50. Label the customs declaration as metal punch scrap.

    .................Buckshot
    I've imported about 14,000 30 caliber gas checks in the past year using those small Global Priority envelopes, spread over several ebay deals. The customs declarations said "gas checks", and Australian customs didn't get itself involved. We do have the advantage that the regulations here state what is an "ammunition component", and the list does not include gas checks, so customs is cool. I can import bullets, jacketed or otherwise, and brass, but I have to get a permit from my local police, which I then send to customs. They grab the bullets/brass when they arrive, match them against my permit, and forward them to me. No great hassle involved, though it takes several weeks to go through all the motions so I tend to apply for a fair-sized batch and let customs hold them until the whole permit is filled over several shipments. Naturally primers, powder and loaded ammunition can't be imported through the mail system, for safety reasons.

    Geoff

  18. #18
    Boolit Bub
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    I have tried to use bullets designed for no gc but after aproximate 100 rounds the accurate will end. This happends both 357mag 44mag.
    357 mag,Bullet: saeco lino 180 grain lubed with Felix, Powder: vv N110 14,3 grain
    Gun S&W 686 6"
    44 mag, Bullet: lino 240 grain lubed with Felix Powder vv N110 20,5 to 21,5 grain
    Gun S&W 629 83/8"

    I have not use cronograf for this loads. But i think it will go pretty fast, too hot loads for no gc. What do you think?
    I need the speed for the bullet tractory. In the competision we shot on targets from 20 to 200 yards. Targets are placed in nature and you dont no the distance.

  19. #19
    Boolit Master
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    Aluminium gaschecks aren't hard to make and work fine for high power loads. I have only made 30 cal. checks. I don't have time right now but will post some piks....
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails MVC-379F.JPG   MVC-381F.JPG  

  20. #20
    Boolit Master
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    Sven;
    Watch for the next group buy on gas checks and order as many as you can afford, I got 14,000 for about $150, they were from .22 to .45.

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Abbreviations used in Reloading

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