So I’ve been coating my own with HiTek for years now, but now for the first time I’m having really bad leading.
Same batch of powder. Same mix with acetone. Same Breville convection oven on the same settings. Same alloy, even the same style 9mm mold. I wasn’t seeing failures on the rub off or smash tests but upped the bake times anyway, confirming that I passed 180°C for three minutes using a K probe in a drilled out bullet set in the tray, which also confirmed the oven settings. But what worked perfectly before fails miserably now.
For a while I thought the problem was a poorly machined after market barrel, then different type rifling (lands and grooves versus Glock polygonal). Three other barrels, however, including a BarSto, KKM and a new OFM barrel off another Glock all gummed up quickly.
I finally remembered I have a good supply of commercial cast and HiTek coated bullets. I made up the same load and they ran perfectly to the tune of 350 rounds through two of the above barrels with zero leading.
So it’s not the barrels. It’s probably the coating, it’s prep, application or the curing. I haven’t heard of properly stored HiTek powder going bad, the prep and application is the same, so maybe the baking is going wrong? While the oven seems to work properly, with confirmed temps, and passes on the rub off and smash tests, an engineer friend suggested hot and cold spots in the oven causing uneven baking where some bullets would be fine but others would fail (I do rotate the tray halfway through the bake).
Ill check the oven, but does anyone have any other suggestions?