I have a very expensive Hensley and Gibbs 250 grain 44 SWC 6 Cavity mold that had a gas check. I had it milled off. It looks fine and all appears well.
But, the bullet won't shoot well in any 44 caliber I have tried it it. It is a pistol design.
I have a 6 Cavity 357 mold that started as a 160 grain #51 and it was sent back to Hensley and Gibbs for changing the bullet to be a 200 grain Plain Base 357 caliber. Bullets look great.
Now, I have two very expensive Paper Weights.
If I were going to try that again, I would try it with an inexpensive mold, like a Lee, but I wouldn't want to pay much to have it done.
I recently purchased a new Saeco 4 cavity mold #630 (30 caliber) with a plain base. It is a duplicate of the #316 that shoots extremely well in my 30/30s. The Cost was about $140 at Buffalo Arms Company.
I haven't had much experience with it yet to tell if it is going to be accurate.
However, my first tests with the bullets going too fast (probably) gave poor results.
Point being is that the new Saeco appears to be one that was originally a #316 and the gas check was milled off. My 316 bullet will fit perfectly in the 630 cavity.
I have not been able to further test that new bullet, yet. But, the time is coming very soon.
Harold