The wx here in Jawja has been AWFULL!! The winter monsoons started yesterday and the only thing that would make it just perfect is if the temp dropped a few more degrees and all this cold rain turned to ice...
I don't know when I'll ever get to the range again!
So, sitting in the man cave last night ( was down there so Kathie wouldn't catch me smoking...
and drinkin...
- as if she didn't know what I was doin...
) I decided I'd try those hot glue bullets we talked about. I'd picked up a glue gun last weekend, watched a few flicks on the subject on U-tube and got a bunch of 44 Mag cases from Bill.
Nothin to it! After some trial and error the method that worked for me was: coat the appropriate areas of the mould with a release agent, I used RemOil on a Q-Tip, rubber band the mould handles together, leave the plate open and fill the cavities with the glue, close the plate and top off the cavity, drink a beer while it cools, remove glue bullets. Repeat process.
Not as fast a procedure as regular casting, but doing a few a night will eventually get me a good supply and certainly a good buzz on...
But let me told you sumpin! Them little boolets was so pretty I couldn't wait to try them! Sooooooo, after rubbing their little bodies with some of my Beeswax/Crisco mix, I found they slipped right into the sized and belled brass that Will'um sent me. Six pieces of said brass were quickly primed and, with a bullet in place, loaded into my Ruger SBH!
The good news is that I was pretty amazed at the accuracy!
I wonder if the fact that these bullets "as cast" are large enough in diameter to engage the rifling makes them more accurate then the plastic "bore rider" type you can buy from Speer?
At least they seem more accurate to me outa the Ruger...
The commercial plastic bullets will make it down the bore of my 24" M92, I assume in part because of the minimal friction in the bore. It will be interesting to see how the glue bullets work through a rifle.
Lastly, after two firings, I could see no damage to the glue bullets. Well, at least the nose.
My eyesight was beginning to fail by that time for some reason
and I didn't think to check for rifling marks. But no damage or markings jumped right out at me...
The bad news is the revolver locked up with the first shot. Well DUH!
Of course it would! I'll drill out the flash hole on the brass before I continue with my experiment!
BTW, just for grins, I checked to see if the Glue bullets would work in the commercial (Speer) plastic bullet cases. And, with bullets from my 44 mould they will! But said mould is the RCBS 44-240-SWC, a GC mould. Only the GC rebate area slips into the plastic case. I doubt if a bullet from a FB mould would work. No worries, in my opinion the brass cases are better anyway.
Now, if I finish up my basement range this weekend I can shoot 38, 44 and 45 caliber pistols and rifles whenever I want! Let it rain, let it rain...