I guess I missed Joe's posts.
I will say a few things.
1. The coating is amazing. I don't know how it works but in the application it does things I didn't think were physically possible.
2. The coating process takes some work. It would be much easier for me to throw fresh cast bullets in a lubrisizer, pack them up and ship them out.
3. When coated properly, there is no leading or coating build up.
4. I wasn't satisfied with the hammer trick, so I a bullet in a vice, the coating was still intact when I clamped the vice all the way shut. I should have took a picture, but I threw the bullet back in the lead pot. But to tell you the truth, nothing beats a recovered bullet, I have plans to shoot on some private property where recovery will be possible.
5. It takes a long time to get coating, attempts are being made to get ahead of the curve of demand as far as supply goes. Big boats are slow, it can't go through the air. We can't make it get here any faster, orders are being made before the previous order arrives.
6. Coated bullets have been sent to World class shooters, we have plenty of Grand Masters in Louisiana, with positive feedback in Limited and Open guns, and a certain someone that can shoot as fast as a machine gun from Louisiana.
I know this is not the place to market a finished bullet, lets face it, this is a place for DIYers. If I ever get caught up I am going to do some experiments with less expensive ovens and see if I can find a way for a home caster to use the coating. The biggest issue is the fee for shipping a hazardous item and getting the bullet to the correct temperature for the right amount of time. I have done business with plenty of sponsors on the board and learned a lot from contributors and if a DIY way is possible I want to bring it to market for the community, when, something I don't know.