Howdy,
I've been pouring lead into some newly acquired moulds and have one old single-cavity that is a a mystery to me. It is Lyman's #454612. This is a heavy .45 caliber bullet. It has two very deep, square grease grooves, a relatively long ogive, and a flat nose. There is no crimp groove. when sized and lubed with Alox, it weighs 298 grains. I am guessing that the bullet showed up in the 1960's or 70's, based on its absence in Lyman's first cast handbook, and only a picture and specs in the second edition.
There is no published data for this bullet, so I'm guessing that it was a special order number. It resembles the LBT design and should chamber in a Ruger cylinder, but is probably too long to function in a Colt, or in a lever-action rifle chambered for the .45 Colt. I plan on seating it over 18 grains of 2400 and seeing what happens. That charge works well for a properly sized #457191 in my Blackhawk.
Does anyone have any history or experience with this bullet? It looks like a real winner.
Bitterroot Bob