There is much better no doubt.
BUT LEE are entirely useable and far less expensive.
Midway currently has many on CLEARANCE with some 6cavs 25$!!!
CW
There is much better no doubt.
BUT LEE are entirely useable and far less expensive.
Midway currently has many on CLEARANCE with some 6cavs 25$!!!
CW
NRA Life member • REMEMBER, FREEDOM IS NOT FREE its being paid for in BLOOD.
Come visit my RUMBLE & uTube page's !!
https://www.RUMBLE.com/user/Cwlongshot
https://youtube.com/channel/UCBOIIvlk30qD5a7xVLfmyfw
Have them for 45 ACP, 45 Colt, 9mm, 40, 44, and 38/357 (2). Pre-heat with a hotplate while lead pot melts and good bullets almost from the first pour. A 20# pot is a plus, you'll go through a lot of alloy quickly.
I use them and have no issues with them.
I like them. I have a bunch of the 6 cav group buys that we did here. Last winter I purchased a new 6 cav mold and it's an incredible caster from the first pour. All I did was scrub it up in hot water and dish soap then preheat on my hot plate. Can't beat um for the price.
No complaints about Lee here, I have at least a dozen of them that all cast very well. I would suggest also looking at MP molds for 9mm and .38 casting. They are about $30 more than Lee’s six cavity molds but with MP you get 8 cavities and they are higher quality.
With a 6-cavity mould you want a large capacity bottom pour , at least 20 pound capacity .
Otherwise you waste too much time waiting for lead to melt .
Another member uses two pots ... casting from one while the other pot melts a fresh fill and gets up to temperature ,
I don't use a bottom pour pot , I pressure cast with a Lyman spouted dipper ...
NOE 3 and 4 cavity moulds have spoiled me , Lee is like driving a old Chevy ...that needs a paint job , brake job and engine overhaul
NOE is like driving a brand new Lexus
That said ...most of my moulds are old 2 cavity chevy's and 1 cavity Lyman .
Gary
Certified Cajun
Proud Member of The Basket of Deplorables
" Let's Go Brandon !"
”We know they are lying, they know they are lying, they know we know they are lying, we know they know we know they are lying, yet they are still lying.” –Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn
My Straight Shooters thread:
http://castboolits.gunloads.com/show...raight-shooter
The Pewter Pictures and Hallmarks thread:
http://castboolits.gunloads.com/show...-and-hallmarks
All my molds are Lee's, I have one 6 cavity for 9m.m. and it does what it's supposed to.
Old retired guy in Baton Rouge La.
I have lots of Lee’s, they cast well and the 3rd handle for the cam action sprue plate is great. That said, when you get the money treat yourself to a brass MP mold, they are works of art and a joy to cast. His fit and finish are superb and the hollow point, hollow base pin system works great. Tim
two six-cav. Lee molds at hand and a 20 lbs. bottom pour are the faster and better upgrade, for me, if I can plan to use the same batch of alloy for the same caliber.
fine enough for my needs and they have never given problems for twenty years to date, whereas in the beginning i had no other teachers or mentors except the R. Lee handbook_
Food is overrated. A nice rifle is way more important.
Rob
I just got the lee 6cav. .45 200gr tl. They drop great very few rejects and powder coated, man o man do they shoot good.
I have several also ,358 ,.401 ,.452 , 00B .
I buy my NOEs in 5c , 4 if I want w/w/o checks , I wish they had the sprue handle .
I have a Lyman 4 cav ....... 100 gr 25 cal is hard to keep hot .
I have an 8cav H&G #130 it too is hard to keep hot .
In all I have at least 7-8 moulds that suck up 2000-2500 gr per pour . This may be the year I spring for the bottom pour .
I will +1 for a 20# pot with the 6s even a bottom pour in the bigger moulds like some of mine would only get 60 pours and be empty . I can only ladle about 15# so that only ends up being about 45 pours before I have to reload , and wait .
In the time of darkest defeat,our victory may be nearest. Wm. McKinley.
I was young and stupid then I'm older now. Me 1992 .
Richard Lee Hart 6/29/39-7/25/18
Without trial we cannot learn and grow . It is through our stuggles that we become stronger .
Brother I'm going to be Pythagerus , DiVinci , and Atlas all rolled into one soon .
I just fired up a 6 cav .223 55 gr lee mold. Pulled it out of the box and hit it with some brake cleaner, set it on the pot to preheat while the lead was melting and while casting with it to get it up to temp it was cranking out perfect boolits in no time, I thought I was going to have trouble because of the small caliber but they filling out great and dropping free just opening the mold. Can't wait now to get things set for some serious casting in the next couple of days.
Na... It just means that you run with a comfortable cadence. Im not racing, im just enjoying the music and pouring some silver.
L. Bottoms
I use several Lee molds and one of them is a 6-cav. One advantage to the Lee 6-cavs is the sprues are very shallow, so you use less lead per pour. I think an RCBS or Lyman ladle would be able to fill a 9mm 6-cav in one pour. The 45s—not so much, so that's something to consider if you use a dipper.
My 6-cav is a 55-grain boolit. It needs fast casting to stay hot, but the larger boolits may keep enough heat in the mold to run two of them like some have said. On the other end of the spectrum, I have a Lee 405-gr boolit mold (2-cav) that requires some babying to keep it from getting too hot!
I have three and very happy with them. Lots of good bullets quick!
TF
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 |