WOW! What great responses! I cast some bullets last night, taking my time and carefully noting each element of the operation: melt temp, rate of casting, mould temp, fluxing, melt level, stuff like that. Now y'all have given me more things to try! No problem, I need to cast some RB's!
Something I read elsewhere is to take a carpenters pencil and rub the lead not only on the top of the mould around the sprue but also the underside of the sprue plate and even the top. The graphite seems to prevent lead smears when cutting the sprue and the sprue doesn't seem to stick to the sprue plate.
Now I thought this was a neat trick, then I started thinking. Do y'all wipe the sprue plate down with lube to accomplish the same thing?
Is the mould new and did you clean it good. I use break cleaner to clean my moulds.
Ah Forest my mentor!
Seems like everyone mentioned cleaning the new moulds. I scrubbed each down with soap and water, but after reading here I'm going back to square one and reclean them as so many of you suggested!
I also add about 2% tin to my lead. Get a role of solder from the hard ware store add about 1/4 of it to your lead.
I'm using straight WW's. I was thinking of boosting the tin content and see what effect that had on the WW melt. What do y'all think would be the right mix? Say 1/4 lb. of 50/50 solder to 10lbs. WW's?
Ive heard good things about some 'casting additive', forget the name, its supposed to be magic; maybe someday I'll try some.
Hey Blake! Okay, we got mould cleaning and alloy in the works, but who sells this additive? I'd be curious to see what it contains!
After cleaning I always smoke mine with a couple of matches,
I never tried matches, but I bought that "drop out" because of the problem I had getting the RB's to let go of the moulds. Last night I didn't use it and the bullets fell from the mould just as well as the 45's I cast the night before. Actually, matches will probably be much easier then the spray.
Gotta' run the Lee's HOT.
Hey Ben! That became obvious last night when I paid more attention! I kept the melt temp. as constant as possible, but even after preheating the mould as others have suggested, I got wrinkled bullets at first. I could see them improve with each pair cast until they were wrinkle free. But I had to cast
fast!
These days I use a product called Bull Plate Lube for treating alignment pins, also for lubing the sprue plate and the mould top which prevents lead smear build-up. Bull Plate is made and sold by a fellow from Alaska and is used by quite a few casters.
I saw a reference to that stuff on the cast boolets forum Frank. It seems really popular over there. So you do lube the sprue plate and also the top of your mould?
BTW, you still shooting them itti bitti 38-55 groups with your cast bullets?
with all my molds I use a Q-tip and put a little Kroil in the cavity. First couple bullets out of the mold are rejects, but the rest are good.
I like that idea! I love Kroil! heck, I've thought about putting it on my salad!
as said, frosted bullets don't hurt a thing. Get the mold to working, and then you can work on your rhythm to making the shinny bullets.
I know,
but I shinny stuff!
I'd always heard that the frosted bullets were because of to high a melt temperature. Last night I noticed that the appearance of the bullets I cast didn't change their appearance from the first to the last. They actually had a rough texture which could be shined off with a rag. (No, I'm not going to start polishing my bullets!)
I kept the melt around 700 degrees. That doesn't seem to hot to me, but what do I know. I started wondering if maybe I melted a zink weight when I was smelting the last batch of WW's.
BTW again! I weighed and measured the bullets I kept and they all weighed between 440 and 442 gr. Diameters were all between .501 and .503 with the majority right at .502. Do those diviations sound about right to everyone? I'm happy with them!