Well, the other night I did some more experimenting with my newly Lee-mented .309 mould. The end result was bright and shiny bullets with nice sharply defined grooves! I'm a happy boy!
I even dropped them from the mould into a bucket of water. Something I've never done before.
So, a polished mould... and? Alloy. After reading and weighin and calculatin and scratchin my head bone and calculatin some more, I decided that my 95/5 strips are about
1/
8 oz. each. So 2 too 2 and a half strips per pound of WW's should get the alloy to somewhere around 2% tin. And some antimony to boot. Maybe very roughly a 97-2-1(
+/-) mix? Feel free to check my math guys!
So, a polished mould, new alloy... and? Temperature. I ran the pot at a pretty constant 725 degrees.
I'm going to try to recast the .501 bullets tonight and see if the alloy/temp change makes any difference in that mould.
B. The little you added to your melt probably wasn't enough to make a big difference. You figure at 1% you ad 1lb tin to 100lbs lead. So your 2 lbs of lead you would need 1/64th of a lb. so by that you may have added enough tin.
Hey Kevin! Your post got me thinking about the weight thing. Thanks!
I figured using smaller numbers since I don't think I'll ever be working with a hundred pounds of lead!
Anyway, 2% of 16 oz. = .32 oz which is about
1/
3 of an ounce per pound. That's why I added another strand per pound to the alloy.
If I were to get one of those Lee hardness testers, can I use it to get a closer approximation of the alloy mix?
Only having 2 lbs in your bottom pour pot doesn't have a lot of pressure on the lead coming out.
You're right! I increasing the amount of melt in the pot and it was easy to see how that makes a noticeable difference in the flow rate. I'll watch the melt level from now on.
Fill out problems can also be caused by poorly vented molds. I am not sure what kind of mold you have but are the vent lines open? I routinely go over the vent lines with a scribe tool (the awl-like tool in the bottom of a square) to open them up a bit.
Good point! I read about doing that in the Lee-menting process and did it on the .309 mould. But now that you mention it, I'm not sure I did it to the .501 mould.
I will before I cast anymore bullets with it though!
This has been an informative thread for me.
I really enjoy trying something and getting to bounce the results off of people! You guys are great!