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Thread: This is getting silly

  1. #21
    Boolit Master on Heavens Range
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    What we are really interested in is the ability of the lead to hold onto itself as one glob as the boolit travels down the tube. It appears the correlation between actual hardness and "shearness" is not that good for most of the alloys we seem to generate. This is why I have never bothered obtaining a lead hardness tester. It seems we need a tool to measure the weight of the boolit before and after being driven into some kind of die (a take off barrel section of sorts) with heavy duty lands. Ideally for us, the heavier boolit will have had its lead driven into the boolit rather than having been sheared off. (Cut off the tits caused by the lands before measuring). ... felix
    felix

  2. #22
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    If I remember right, Elmer K said the best boolits were plain base 11 bhn and could be pushed to 1200 fps.

  3. #23
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    That makes me wonder how many different alloys, casting, aging and hardening procedures there are that will come out to 11 BN? That's what I am getting at, hardness alone doesn't answer the question. Exactly what alloy did Elmer use?

  4. #24
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    I think that this is getting interesting. The resistence to shearing very well may NOT be 100% correlated to hardness. I would really REALLY like to see more information on this.
    OeldeWolf
    who may yet be kicked out of the Republik of Kalifornia for owning too many firearms.

    I didn't claw my way to the top of the food chain, to eat only vegetables!

  5. #25
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    This is greek to me cause I just use straight ww but after listing some hot loads in Sixguns, Keith said, "With all the loads listed in this paragraph, bullet diameter is fixed at .001 of an inch over groove diameter and cast to a temper of one part tin to sixteen parts lead, or a mixture of half tin and half antimony in the same formula".

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by felix View Post
    It seems we need a tool to measure the weight of the boolit before and after being driven into some kind of die (a take off barrel section of sorts) with heavy duty lands. Ideally for us, the heavier boolit will have had its lead driven into the boolit rather than having been sheared off. (Cut off the tits caused by the lands before measuring). ... felix

    Felix,

    I don't know about this. I would say that impact speed might have to factor in. At slow (sizing) speeds all mixes and hardness's I have used elongate forward of the mid point and then back in the last half. (path of least resistance) Especially when the bullet is protected by hydraulic lube function. So pressure may make a difference too.

    Baring galling, weight change comes from the loss of lube basically. The only area where this can be a problem is on a GC design where there isn't enough room between the check and the first drive band to allow the lead to flow back. Or on really hard / brittle PB as the lead displaces back.
    Reading can provide limited education because only shooting provides YOUR answers as you tie everything together for THAT gun. The better the gun, the less you have to know / do & the more flexibility you have to achieve success.

  7. #27
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    My memory is'nt all that great , But if I can recall Keith used :
    10:1 for autos.
    16&20:1 for 44s. but mostly 16:1.
    In those days tin was cheep and he used alloys very rich in it.
    16 LB of lead to 1 Lb of tin! And in big ol 44s to boot!! YIKE$!!
    NRA LIFER .. "THE CAST BULLET HANDLOADER IS THE ONLY ONE THAT REALLY MAKES ANY OF HIS AMMUNITION. OTHERS MEARLY ASSEMBLE IT". -E.H. HARRISON

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  8. #28
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    100 percent correct, 44man. There is no practical way, really, to measure what is needed for the reasons you stated. Static and dynamic characteristics are extremely important to what must be accomplished, and how to take this into account on a desk top would be nothing short of displaying our mutual insanity in progressing the techniques of processing the results of the silver stream. ... felix
    felix

  9. #29
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    I just re-checked some boolits I cast for my 358 Winny in ACWW with my- HOLD your ears.. "LEE Hardness Tester", and upon casting on 9-7 they were 8bhn, and today the 15th they are 10.4.

  10. #30
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    I just checked my air cooled 50-50 mix and they are now up to 8 BN. I will do this for a month.

  11. #31
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    Elmer mostly used 16/1 lead/tin. He didn't like wheelweights as he believed that you couldn't get all of the grit from them and was afraid that he would ruin his fine handguns. He used a softer alloy for hollow point bullets (without looking, I remember it as 20/1).

    I started casting bullets about 1950 (at my father's urging) and my only guide was Elmer's little blue book, "Sixgun Cartridges and Loads". I would buy "plumbers lead in five lb pigs" and "temper" with solder to get 16/1 or equivalent. Then I went through a linotype stage (all bullet metals were cheap and readily available in my small (70,000 population) industrial city. I had almost no disposable income (heck, no one I knew did for most of my formative years even into adulthood ) so I either cast bullets and loaded my own or didn't shoot. I went YEARS before I used any factory ammo. I worked for my family and we owned and operated a small hardware store and appliance repair shop (my assigned duties were automatic laundry repairs). We had an FFL and did get everything at cost, so that helped. I really got into serious shooting about the time I turned 19 and joined a new local gun club (where I am now a life member).

    The point of all of this is even I didn't start using wheel weights until later in life. The raw materials were not expensive, we knew what the content was (well, pretty much, as the "plumbers lead" was not entirely pure lead). Linotype was used to harden the alloy and was readily available for 20 cents a lb for many, many years. Of course, this was USED Linotype but it was pretty consistently good.

    When tin started getting pricey that is when I started using wheel weights. This allowed me to use less Linotype and to dispense with pure tin for my cast bullets. I was shooting LOTS of cast bullets by this time (in one five year period I cast, loaded and shot 75,000 rounds for IPSC competition alone and my two boys together shot probably half as much).

    So, we have to look at the times to see why some of the top people in shooting did what they did.

    ON TOPIC:

    My experience with hardness testing with my LBT tester was that NEARLY all of the hardness in most regularly used alloys takes place within two weeks (there is some additional hardening still taking place but it did not seem to be significant). This is with air hardened wheel weight alloys and other much used alloys such as Lyman #2.

    I ran no tests to see what would happen one year, two years and longer down the road. However, I have recently discovered a forgotten trove of bullets that I had cast, sized and lubed probably 20+ years ago and have been shooting them in my .45 revolvers. They were lubed with Alox and while it had apparently shrunk a bit (the bullet lube) it seems to work extremely well. I have not hardness tested any of these but it might be interesting to do so.

    I tended to load rather hard bullets for .45 ACP (8/1 ww/Linotype) and 5/1 WW/LInotype for magnum revolver loads (plain base as I seldom use gas check bullets in magnum pistol loads). I sized the bullets to the throats and had excellent results.

    One area that I have little information on, is barrel leading. This is going to sound strange, but I have NEVER had a revolver or pistol that leaded to any extent. So, I have little to add when it comes to that discussion except to discuss what DOES work, don't know much about what DOESN'T work. Please don't take that as arrogance, it is just simply true. I believe that is because since I didn't know a thing about bullet casting and reloading when I started as a teenager (and knew absolutely no one else that did any of this). So, I did the logical thing and bought Elmer's book and FOLLOWED IT TO THE LETTER. I had excellent results and just kept on doing what worked.

    In the years that followed, I met LOTS of really talented shooters and some were good reloaders. I discussed their problems and we came to conclusions that mostly were correct. Occasionally we would get off track but quickly solved most of the problems that arose. I am by nature and careers (plural intended) a trouble shooter so that pretty much came naturally.

    I gave a few reloading seminars (both jacketed and cast with rifle, pistol, and shotgun) and through that broadened my perspective (we'll have to talk about that some time).

    Dale53

  12. #32
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    Thanks for the journy Dale. Is Elmers book still around?

  13. #33
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    Elmer Keith's book, "Sixgun Cartridges and Loads" was written in 1936 and published by Samworth (as I remember) and was reprinted by Wolfe Publishing in 1985. It is now again out of print. You can sometimes find them at used booksellers at the larger gun shows but they tend to be rather pricey.

    Here is a reference but please sit down before you read it:

    http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b/...&Go.y=16&Go=Go

    My original copy has been WELL read and it is becoming a bit fragile but I still find it most interesting to read from time to time. No, it isn't for sale .

    Dale53

  14. #34
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    Just went and checked some .35 cal 200 RCBS ACWW cast in 05' and the bhn is 15.4.

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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