- Location
- Next door to my neighbour
Yup, tool blue. I will cast some up tomorrow and to some measuring.
I have no experience with powder coated bullets so take this with a grain of salt. Using regular alox or newer hard lubed lead bullets in the 9mm has always been an adventure--the most consistent results and best accuracy in a variety of 9mms were with a hard cast bullet sized to .357 or slightly larger. The only issue with this was with some lots of brass the larger bullets would not chamber reliably--a bevel based bullet helped some here. It was important to make sure that the expander enlarged the case enough to seat the bullet without sizing it down and then a very slight taper crimp to straighten out the case mouth and facilitate feeding. I imagine that the later two points would apply to the powder coated bullets also.
Good luck with your quest.
I have no experience with powder coated bullets so take this with a grain of salt. Using regular alox or newer hard lubed lead bullets in the 9mm has always been an adventure--the most consistent results and best accuracy in a variety of 9mms were with a hard cast bullet sized to .357 or slightly larger. The only issue with this was with some lots of brass the larger bullets would not chamber reliably--a bevel based bullet helped some here. It was important to make sure that the expander enlarged the case enough to seat the bullet without sizing it down and then a very slight taper crimp to straighten out the case mouth and facilitate feeding. I imagine that the later two points would apply to the powder coated bullets also.
Good luck with your quest.
I suspect, on the way to the range now and will see what happens.
This is turning out to be a long range visit.
You shot the .353 bullets?
I just read your other thread you linked to and think it might be your barrel in this gun, not a bullet problem. You said that your .38-.357 handles your PC bullets just fine and this barrel leads up with conventional soft lube as well. Two things I can suggest, one is to build a lapping rod and go to work with a lot of elbow grease and jewelers rouge...especially paying attention to the free bore/land start area and then make the bore shine like a new penny...Second option is to replace the gun or go back to plated slugs.
I agree with you and powder coating makes it doubly so. PC increases the dia to differing degrees (depending on powder make & condition and method of application). I size all my coated bullets after coating just for the sake of repeatability in seating. Another thing I am very fortunate to have some machining tools as part of this hobby. Because of this I can cut a case mouth sizing plug in a few minutes to set case tension to whatever lead hardness I am using without distorting the bullet. If you are using commercial cast boolits in the 25Bhn range then they will expand the brass to fit them but I have a s#$% load of WW lead and no hardening alloy to add to it so I make my brass conform to my bullet hardness (around 8Bhn or so). I discovered the importance of this testing some PC boolits for the wife's 30-30. First test was "as cast" (.310) plus PC (now at .313) loaded into full length resized cases (.306 ex ball). The bullets seated very tight and required a fair push in the press so I measured the O.D. of the case mouth before and after seating, only 1 thou difference even tho I was seating a bullet .007 bigger then the expander. They shot a less than adequate group of 3-4 ". Next test I used same bullets only sized to .311 after coating and used my "custom" expander plug cut to .310, they still chambered easily and my group shrunk to 1.5 ".
If I may add, for anyone who has ever thought "geez I wish I had the machine to build this or that" I consider my machine tools as much an important part of this hobby as my guns... and a small "adequate for this part of the sport" set-up can be had for less than a good (or not so good) Single Shot rifle. I am blessed with a 1440 lathe that I use mostly but also have a small mini-lathe that would be completely adequate for small tooling such as we need for this sport. You don't need to be "Einstien" to be a hobby machinist neither, just the nerve to chuck something up and give"r a whirl. Trial & error worked for me. I get as much satisfaction out of building a set of dies for some obsolete cartridge, custom neck sizing dies as well as the aforementioned expander balls as I do out of the actual shooting.
Water dropping them will harden them up a bit but the baking after powder coating will anneal them right back to base hardness. You can heat treat them after curing the powder coat however. An hour @ 450 and then dump them straight into ice water. Doesn't hurt the PX at all in my experience.If you are casting straight wheelweights you can increase the hardness by casting your bullet with the temperature of the lead on the hotter side and dropping the bullets straight out of the mould into a 5 gallon pail half or three quarters full of cold water--be very careful not to let water splash in to your mould blocks or the lead pot or very bad things will happen.
this is what we used to do with the bullets we cast for metallic silhouette shooting--.357, .41 and .44 caliber--also used it with 9mm and 45 acp with good results.