John,
Here's the first target. The 5 larger holes are from the .45-70. These were shots 9 - 13 as it took 8 to get on the target (first shots thru brand new gun). Wiped with a Ballistol soaked patch between shots as I was paranoid about rusting my new gun. Maybe since I now know the rifling is so shallow, I should have used a water soaked patch? Less chance of bullet slipping on the rifling?
A friend gave me 50 Brooks 545 Creedmoor bullets @ .459 dia to try. I sized them down to .457 with a Lee sizing die to fit a homemade inline bullet seating die. I wanted to make sure the bullet went into the case as straight as possible and decided to make the hole for the bullet in the die .457 (as it could always be made larger if needed).
The brass were full length sized with a LEE sizing die which caused run-out to be a lot less than ideal, but the bullets were seated very straight (no bulge in brass like you get using the factory Lee seating die).
Since I needed more bullets (and not sure of what mold to order), I ordered the Paul Jones 540 gr. Long Range Creedmore (45001) from Sagebrush. These come sized to .459. Once I get these, I was thinking that I would try the same reloading steps as last time except neck sizing the brass only with a Redding neck sizing die (on back order right now). I could try some at .459 but they won't fit my inline seating die unless I open it up.
Do you think I should just concentrate on .457 or make the inline die bigger?