Have alot of boolit moulds! Lyman, Magma, RCBS, H&G, and Lee. Most iron moulds are expensive. The aluminum alloy Lee moulds turn out a quality boolit. They are a bit more fragile than the iron moulds. The 6-cavity Lee moulds crank out a good quantity of boolits in any casting session. My wrists get sore handling the 4-cavity Lyman and Hensley & Gibbs heavy iron moulds. Lee 6-cavity moulds are light and easy to handle. There is a weak link in the Lee 6-cavity moulds. The screw plate screw tends to strip out the threads in the block or they shear off. Drilling out the broken thread in the block is a pain. The sprue plate shoulder screw is a 10-32 Calling Lee company and waiting on the phone for 25 minutes for customer service resulted in no fix for the problem. I measured the hole in the sprue plate @ .320 in diameter. The largest thread you could tap in the mould block is 5/16x24 I found a 3/8" 6 grunt bolt to chuck up in the lathe and turned it to the .320 in diameter. Had to reduce the shank to .312 to cut a 5/16x24 thread. Drilled the aluminum mould block out with a letter I drill and tapped a new thread in the block. The little wavy thrust washer applies just enough force on the sprue plate to keep it secure and tight on top of the mould block. I found Blaster Company now has spray graphite that works great on boolit moulds. I realize not every boolit caster with a broken mould does not have a lathe handy but that is what friends are for! My suggestion to Lee was to turn out a 5/16 shoulder replacement sprue plate screw and offer it as a retro fit.Attachment 311839Attachment 311840Attachment 311841Attachment 311842Attachment 311843