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cabezaverde
05-10-2020, 09:12 AM
Guys,

I consider myself to be a fairly experienced caster, but need some help.

For the first time, I have started working with a single cavity Lyman mold with the removeable hollow point pin. Alloy is coww with some added tin.

Overall, I am happy with the way the body is coming out, but I am getting a smeared hollow point. It does not match the profile of the pin.

A few things I have tried:

Giving the pin a twist or two before removing it from the mold.

I have lubed the pin with some synthetic 2 stroke oil.

I still seem to get the mis-shaped hollow point cavity. Am I being too picky?

Should I not remove the pin before opening the mold?

Any suggestions?

la5676
05-10-2020, 09:28 AM
My two pesos. Clean off any an all remnants of oil. Hot lead doesn't seem to like oil on the surface. I have stored some of my molds long term with a light spray of lube, and always have to use acetone to get it off before I get a good boolit.

And I've had your same issues with the 356637 HP. The perimeter of the HP tip would invariably have a flaw in it. Higher temps helped to alleviate the issue.

HTH,

Valley-Shooter
05-10-2020, 09:39 AM
Preheat the hollow point pin on a hotplate. I have used a copper pipe fittings before on the hotplate to hold it vertical. That's pin needs to real hot. Clean off the oil, make sure it's super clean and smooth. Graphite or pencil lead helps with sticking.

Sent from my Pixel 4 XL using Tapatalk

Larry Gibson
05-10-2020, 09:40 AM
As mentioned keep the mould clean and oil free including the HP stem.

Alloy temp should be 710 - 725 degrees.

Cast at a tempo that keeps the mould and stem hot.

Don't dribble alloy into cavity. Open spout to get alloy into cavity as soon as possible and let a good sprue build up and even flow off sprue plate.

Let the sprue harden, twist HP stem and remove, cut sprue, drop bullet out of mould, close blocks and immediately put the HP stem back in the mould and refill the cavity.

While the next sprue is hardening you can put the cut sprue back in the pot. I do not inspect the bullets until casting is done and they have cooled. That way an even casting tempo can be maintained.

Inspecting the bullet with the mould empty an/or putting the sprue back in the pot will let both the mould blocks and, in particular, the HP stem cool too much. Imperfect HPs and wrinkled bullets can easily be the result.

With single cavity Lyman HP moulds quantity is not the goal, quality is. With quality casting quantity will follow as less will be rejected. An old Army saying; "slow is smooth, smooth is fast...…"

If casting in cooler temperatures another means of keeping the HP stem may be needed. When I lived up north an cast in cooler temps, particularly in the winter I used a small propane bottle torch with a low flame to keep the stem hot while cutting the sprue, dropping the bullet out and closing the mould blocks.

261910

cabezaverde
05-10-2020, 10:06 AM
Sounds like my biggest problem is oiling the pin.

ascast
05-10-2020, 10:14 AM
No oil, more heat, if more heat don't work, try more heat, if no work-add tin, but those should work with low tin content

gwpercle
05-10-2020, 06:25 PM
You can preheat the pin by sticking the tip into the hot melt , letting it get hot , wiping the pin off and inserting it into mould .
No oil on pin .
Gary

catkiller45
12-23-2021, 10:56 AM
sounds like good advice. I just got a lyman hollow point mold for my 44
Henry rifle.. So I know it will be a learning expercience as well. Glad I real
this post..My mold is the 429640 250 gr gas check..Wish me luck..

RogerDat
12-23-2021, 11:03 AM
Might try some powdered graphite. Even just "coloring" the pin with a soft pencil. I found that helped a lot with getting smooth release from pin. I know some have used a graphite spray that has a carrier that completely evaporates but I do not know the brand or product name.

I have powdered graphite to roll cast buckshot in so I just dab some on the pin with a Q-tip. That and lots of heat. I ladle cast and will pour some extra lead off the sides or end of the mold to help keep it hotter.

Good luck. It took a little fiddly farting around by I eventually got good results from a Lyman Minnie mold with the hollow base pin. That was plain lead, without tin to help it flow. I will say on inspection some were rejected but once it all came together not that many.

primerhead
12-23-2021, 07:51 PM
This has always worked for me.

Gator 45/70
12-23-2021, 09:37 PM
sounds like good advice. I just got a lyman hollow point mold for my 44
Henry rifle.. So I know it will be a learning expercience as well. Glad I real
this post..My mold is the 429640 250 gr gas check..Wish me luck..

What gas checks did you buy please?

beagle
12-23-2021, 11:32 PM
You say "smeared hollow point cavity". I'm assuming this means slightly out of round. Looks unsightly. Won't hurt anything but if you want it perfectly round, there's a fix. Buy a piece of 5/16" aluminum round stock. Cut off about an inch. Chuck it in your electric drill. Take a file and cut a shank on it about .260" to fit your sizer. On the other end turn it down until you have a "tit" about 1/8" long and just very slightly larger than the diameter of the HP cavity in your mould. Use this when sizing as a top punch. It accomplishes two things. The first is that it centers the nose of the bullet. The second is that it sizes or swages out the nose cavity until it's perfectly round. Been doing this for years. I call it a "nose picker TP". If you slightly radius the side of the tit to the flat, it gives a nice looking champfer to the HP cavity. Takes maybe 45 minutes with an electric drill and file. If you have a lathe, it goes faster. Drill press will work too./beagle

mehavey
12-24-2021, 09:10 AM
I've never had HP release problems... maybe because I insert the hollow-pointer through a small hole drilled in the bottom ("top") of the pre-heater pot shown here:
https://s15.postimg.cc/n7t2rmxtn/Hotplate.jpg
The HP pin preheats the same as the mould blocks.

https://i.postimg.cc/XJWdvym6/Lyman-Gould-ALOX.jpg