So why did Mr. Keith use 16:1 alloy? Question of the day.
So why did Mr. Keith use 16:1 alloy? Question of the day.
While I am far from an expert on anything I would say it worked for him in what he did with his handguns.
That would seem logical to me. Since in his years after the coming of the 44 Magnum he rarely if ever experimented with loads unless he was testing a new gun that had come out and he would fire maybe a handful of some factory loads. Much preferring his own "heavy" load.
Again what i have written is not meant in any way to hurt, injure, insult, bait or to be mean spirited to anyone. It is only my opinion based on the very little I know so please take it that way.
Dave Scovill has commented that Elmer melted down .45-70 bullets cast of that alloy for his lead supply. I never read Elmer saying that but I started in this hobby in the 1970s so haven't read every single thing Keith ever wrote. Also, Scovill met the man and has talked to him, maybe about this subject.
Rule 303
How did Keith get .45-70 bullets.
I HATE auto-correct
Happiness is a Warm GUN & more ammo to shoot in it.
My Experience and My Opinion, are just that, Mine.
SASS #375 Life
The correct answer is, he pulled and melted 45/70 bullets. The West was full of that ammunition and nobody wanted military surplus 45/70.
You must realize those days were tough. Elmer Keith persevered through very lean times as a young man trying to make his way.
Was he still pulling 45/70 bullets when he worked up the 44 Magnum Keith load?
Again what i have written is not meant in any way to hurt, injure, insult, bait or to be mean spirited to anyone. It is only my opinion based on the very little I know so please take it that way.
I have heard or read that Elmer had access to 16:1 .45/70 boolits through the National Guard in Montana. He was in the Guard. Dunno if this is true or not.
Paper targets aren't your friends. They won't lie for you and they don't care if your feelings get hurt.
BTW, "Hell, I was there!" is also very good, very informative, and quite enjoyable. But in my opinion Sixguns is his best work. I will admit I was not inclined to read him; as I was a bit bitter that his 44 Magnum eclipsed the 44 Special to a point that 44 Specials are somewhat rare other than the new Rugers. But I read Sixguns and it changed my opinion drastically.
I guess one of my favorite Keith later stories (thing it was published only in a magazine as I recall) tells of a gun writer's convention in California. One of the perks was a sport fishing trip off the CA coast. The fish must not have been biting so Elmer broke out his .44 Mag and some heavy 429421s and they started chumming sharks in close to the boat so he could pop them. Said the 429421 did well on sharks near the surface and he had a ball.
Then, he wrote it up in his article.
Then the "bunny huggers" got hold of it and Elmer had to lay low for a while. Sounded like good clean fun to me./beagle
diplomacy is being able to say, "nice doggie" until you find a big rock.....
Elmer also used the 16-1 alloy in his Sharps rifles. He made a quick mention of using lead from lead mines in northern Idaho that he said it worked well as it was. I'm no geologist but I don't know if there was possibly any naturally occurring hardening agent in the lead that was mined to make it work to his satisfaction. A lot of times with Elmer's writings you had to already have some backround into what he was saying or read between the lines. My autographed copy of "Sixguns" is very well used with a few loose pages but is cherished.
I give loading advice based on my actual results in factory rifles with standard chambers, twist rates and basic accurizing.
My goals for using cast boolits are lots of good, cheap, and reasonably accurate shooting, while avoiding overly tedious loading processes.
The BHN Deformation Formula, and why I don't use it.
How to find and fix sizing die eccentricity problems.
Do you trust your casting thermometer?
A few musings.
A #429421 into a shark head is fine by me. Sharks and rattlesnakes are two classes of creature that make you wonder what God was thinking about when He cranked them out.
I don't paint bullets. I like Black Rifle Coffee. Sacred cows are always fair game. California is to the United States what Syria is to Russia and North Korea is to China/South Korea/Japan--a Hermit Kingdom detached from the real world and led by delusional maniacs, an economic and social basket case sustained by "foreign" aid so as to not lose military bases.
Elmer would have had a ball with powder coating. He might have blown up a gun trying to get it to lead! He is still one of the great reads for us boolit junkies.
IT AINT what ya shoot--its how ya shoot it. NONE of us are as smart as ALL of us! The more I travel, the more I like right where I am.
I'm in a weird position... I have a good friend who gets nearly pure tin as industrial scrap, but my supply of pure lead has dried up. Now that I'm shooting front stuffers in North-South Skirmish events, I go through a lot of lead!
When I was shooting schuetzen events in the American Single Shot Rifle Association, it was spoken as gospel that one should avoid antimony at all costs, so linotype wasn't even considered there... I still haven't used up all the lino- and monotype I somehow acquired, but it should go OK in my pistols and maybe revolvers needing relatively hard bullets. I too wonder why Elmer never talked in his later writings about any of the tertiary mixes. I've never seen anyone (including Elmer) who said antimony was bad in pistol bullets, just didn't hear them/him recommending it except of course the old industry standard Lyman #2 that seems to have been developed when linotype was abundant and cheap.
I had the opportunity to visit "The Compleat Angler" in Bimini a few years before it burned. When Papa Hemingway was hanging out there "back in the day" he was having problems with the sharks eating his bill fish. His solution was to swap a rum runner out of a Thompson sub gun and chum up sharks into range to use that on them. I don't recall hearing the bunny huggers giving him any grief about that... but then again, maybe he didn't tell that many folks about it in print!
One has to wonder whether the World would have ever progressed to its current level if PC had been "invented" a century or two earlier... but then again, the World couldn't have advanced to the level to support the pointy headed intellectuals who subscribe to it if they had started trying to retard advancement any earlier!
Froggie
Last edited by Green Frog; 07-04-2018 at 05:07 PM.
"It aint easy being green!"
Back in 62-63 when I was a student at Sul Ross State College in Alpine Texas, eagles were wrecking havoc with the lamb crop of some ranchers to the point they put a bounty on eagles. There was a local fly guy who had a Piper J3 Cub. He flew from the back seat, while I shot flying eagles from the front seat. Yes, care was taken not to shoot the wings struts or other vital parts of the air plane. There was radio contact with a guy on the ground who would retrieve the dead birds for the bounty. He had the hard job as it was rugged country.
Disclaimer: The above is not holy writ. It is just my opinion based on my experience and knowledge. Your mileage may vary.
Last year I was lucky enough to go to the estate sale at the Hensley and Gibbs shop in Murphy, Or.
I live about 30 miles from there.
I was fortunate to be the first to go through their library.
Among the books I bought was a copy of Elmer Keiths book " Six Guns" by Keith.
I already had a copy but could not pass up another .
When I got home I looked inside the cover and found this inscription:
To Hensley & Gibbs
With all best wishes
Elmer Keith
Salmon, Idaho
Oct 25, 1981
Signed in Elmers handwriting.
I also got several of the early Ideal loading books.
Some days you just get lucky....dale
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 |