I measured the antimony, tin and lead on a digital kitchen scale. Got the 18lbs of lead up to melt, fluxed, added the 1lbs of tin, fluxed, at that point the temp was about 630 to 650. Then I added 1/2lbs of antimony and more saw dust as flux. About 10 minutes I noticed a little of the antimony was mixing in!!!!! Added bees wax and things really got moving, fluxing saw dust, beeswax every few minutes. When the first half of antimony disappeared checked the temp, it was at 630. Added the rest of the antimony (1/2lbs) and repeated the fluxing. All was incorporated or alloyed in about 15 more minutes!!!!![/size]I took my mold off the hot plate poured and dropped 6 beautiful boolits! Took one inside to filed off a flat and did the Lee hardness test. The indent was .052 = 19.2 BHN less than 10 minutes out of the mold. YES that was WAY easier than anything I had read or heard!!! I'll be adding some pure lead to the rest of the mix to try to to get some ingots at 16BHN and 18BHN. I've never fluxed as much or a frequently as I did with this. Adding wood ash as a flux also work very well. I didn't have ash to add but as I said I did have sawdust so left it's ash floating on top. I was stirring the pot almost the whole time. I didn't get as much dross as I expected, if fact very very little. But I did leave the ash from the sawdust fluxing in till all the antimony was alloyed in before skimming the ash off. It is important to keep the temps below 650, about 630 was the best for me.Excuse my rambling here but I was sure alloying antimony was going to be very difficult with out high temps and special fluxes. Total time was about 1 hour from start to first cast boolit! [/color]