Hay Black Jacques,
A similar question appeared elsewhere and this was my reply, hope nobody minds if I repeat meself here:
"Part of the fun of pan lubing is learning how to do it. Everyone seems to do it a little different. Keepin' it short, best for me is to use teflon pie pans, stand yer boolits upright (forty works for me), and the first time pour yer lube in just past the lube groove. Let cool 'til just kinda warm and the cake looks hard clear through. Too hot they're messy and the cake breaks up, too cold and things get brittle. I turn my pan upside down on a towel; when the cake is ready - ten minutes isn't too long - it just falls out without help and the pan goes "poink" to call you back into the kitchen (took me a LONG time to learn this).
Some people cut 'em out with a tube of some sort. Some push them from the nose or the base. I lay the cake right side up on a double towel that has a little give to it, then tap each boolit nose once with somethin' - I use a wooden knife handle - to bust it LOOSE, not OUT. Goes fast with practice if ya got rhythm. Gently pick up the cake and push the ones that need it the rest of the way out with yer thumbs. Put the cake back in the pan, fill the holes with fresh lead and put pan in oven (pizza warmin' temp), for +- ten mins until lube is melted again, place on level surface to cool, repeat; I get six pans in rotation at a time.
The refrigerator speeds cooling but is a little tricky fer me to get the timing right. Had to train m'self to be patient. I then use my Lee sizer to clean 'em up. Retired my 450 and spg.
Hope this helps pard, keep tryin' 'til you find what works for you! You'll hear from other folks and we're ALL right. "
Goatlips