FISH4BUGS
03-16-2008, 06:06 PM
I am casting with a 4 cavity Lyman 358156, and will size the bullets WITH a gas check. I have to say that once that mould comes up to temp, you can do a lot of very nice bullets with it. It isn't a Hensley & Gibbs but it works just fine. I use the Magma Star sizer with a Midway heater and Magma lube. I want to squirt the lube onto the bullets at above the gas check, into the lube groove, and into the first crimp groove. These will be my 357 full house load bullets.
First thing I wondered about is there some other way to close the lube holes in the die other than using #7 or #8 shot? If not, then the shot it is.
The next thought is once I get those sized, lubed and the gas checks crimped, I want to change the die over to doing them without the gas checks for the lighter 38/357 loads.
I plan on casting a ton of bullets in the winter (I did some 4000 this winter) , then switching back and forth between sizing them with gas checks and without gas checks, as dwindling supplies and shooting them up demands. This will require the removal of the shot in one lube row. Same principle for the 44's.
Here is the question: what is the easiest way to remove the little shot that you use to plug the lube holes on the die? I would like to figure this out before I get going on 2000 bullets with gas checks, and 2000 without. THEN I can do the 44's.......Another few thousand........
Help me.......I had enough frustration just getting the Star sizer to work! Jeez........those things are finicky.........but when you get it figured out, there is nothing that beats it!
Thanks...........
First thing I wondered about is there some other way to close the lube holes in the die other than using #7 or #8 shot? If not, then the shot it is.
The next thought is once I get those sized, lubed and the gas checks crimped, I want to change the die over to doing them without the gas checks for the lighter 38/357 loads.
I plan on casting a ton of bullets in the winter (I did some 4000 this winter) , then switching back and forth between sizing them with gas checks and without gas checks, as dwindling supplies and shooting them up demands. This will require the removal of the shot in one lube row. Same principle for the 44's.
Here is the question: what is the easiest way to remove the little shot that you use to plug the lube holes on the die? I would like to figure this out before I get going on 2000 bullets with gas checks, and 2000 without. THEN I can do the 44's.......Another few thousand........
Help me.......I had enough frustration just getting the Star sizer to work! Jeez........those things are finicky.........but when you get it figured out, there is nothing that beats it!
Thanks...........