Yes Winchester, but here we are talking about obturation BEFORE the bore -- in fact, before the bullet even enters the throats, before they even leave the chamber in fact. Leading sprayed into the forcing cone and/or throats is not necessarily a bore issue at all, but a symptom of gas cutting before the bullet enters the bore. Also, bullets in the chamber aren't and can't be a "smidgeon" oversize (of chamber diameter) or they wouldn't enter the chamber in the first place, unless you like to chamber rounds with a ball peen hammer. I don't get that much leading at all past the first inch or so in the bore. It is all up front in the throats, forcing cone, and rifling under the threads (yes, I am aware of the compression issue which firelapping removes, and have firelapped several guns with improvement in the bore, but sadly no reduction in up front leading, because again, it's not a bore issue). What the .45 Colt shooters are experiencing and what they are complaining about is leading NOT with superhard slugs (which would of course cause a problem), but leading with fairly soft slugs. The leading I have experienced is from air cooled WW over charges of, say, 7.5, 8.5, 9.0, and even 9.5 or 10.0 gr. Unique. In other words, the whole gamut. Mild to hot. The difficulty, as Veral is explaining it, is getting a .452" slug to obturate close to .009 of an inch before it moves out of the mouth of the brass! Not an easy feat, which is why he is telling us that a .459" bullet is the solution. Thanks for the input though, much appreciated.