I have begun to process some lead for casting 9mm and 40s&w. This is a new adventure for me and there have been many things to figure out. One of the fun things was figuring out the return on investment. I have shared these notes in the hopes that someone can find value in them.
First I travelled near and far and collected some lead. Then reduced the raw supply to ingots.
- 156 ingots averaging 700 g made from range scrap = 109.2kg (240.2 lbs)
- 47 ingots averaging 768.8 g from $25 bucket of wheel weights 36.1kg (79.5lbs)
- Add lynotype alloy at a rate of 6:1 to range scrap. (made some assumptions about the RS composition)
- At 6:1 total lead supply = 240.2 + 240.2/6 + 79.5 = 360 lbs
- May need to source additional Sn. Hoping for up to 2% tin in range scrap
- Linotype = $6.00/lb +gst = $6.30/lb
- Wheel weights approx = $0.31/lb
a) total cost ($6.30/lb)(40lbs)+$25 = $277
b) cost per pound ($277/360lbs) = $0.769/lb
c) cost per 125 gn bullet ($0.769/lb)(125gr/bullet)/(7000gr/lb) = $0.0137/ 125 gr 9mm bullet
d) cost per 180gn bullet ($0.769/lb)(180gr/bullet)/(7000gr/lb) = $0.0198/ 180 gr 40 S&W bullet
Process of casting is to use two moulds, filling one while letting the other cool before dropping the bullets.
This should increase casting efficiency because there will be less time watching the mould waiting for it to cool enough to drop the bullets. Produce 9mm and 40 s&w at a ratio of 1:1, 6 at a time. We'll see if it works like planned.
360 lbs lead alloy
for every one 180 gr bullet there will be one 125 gr bullet
Determine the total number of 180 gr bullets and 125 gr bullets that can be produced from 360 lbs of lead alloy with a Lee 6 cavity mold.
360lbs = (x/2)(180gr+125gr)/7000gr/lb
x/2= (360lbs)(7000gr/lb)/(180gr+125gr)
x/2= 8262
360 lbs can produce 8262 180gr 40S&W bullets and 8262 125gr 9mm bullets
I'm certainly looking forward to shooting for 10 cents per round.
First I travelled near and far and collected some lead. Then reduced the raw supply to ingots.
- 156 ingots averaging 700 g made from range scrap = 109.2kg (240.2 lbs)
- 47 ingots averaging 768.8 g from $25 bucket of wheel weights 36.1kg (79.5lbs)
- Add lynotype alloy at a rate of 6:1 to range scrap. (made some assumptions about the RS composition)
- At 6:1 total lead supply = 240.2 + 240.2/6 + 79.5 = 360 lbs
- May need to source additional Sn. Hoping for up to 2% tin in range scrap
- Linotype = $6.00/lb +gst = $6.30/lb
- Wheel weights approx = $0.31/lb
a) total cost ($6.30/lb)(40lbs)+$25 = $277
b) cost per pound ($277/360lbs) = $0.769/lb
c) cost per 125 gn bullet ($0.769/lb)(125gr/bullet)/(7000gr/lb) = $0.0137/ 125 gr 9mm bullet
d) cost per 180gn bullet ($0.769/lb)(180gr/bullet)/(7000gr/lb) = $0.0198/ 180 gr 40 S&W bullet
Process of casting is to use two moulds, filling one while letting the other cool before dropping the bullets.
This should increase casting efficiency because there will be less time watching the mould waiting for it to cool enough to drop the bullets. Produce 9mm and 40 s&w at a ratio of 1:1, 6 at a time. We'll see if it works like planned.
360 lbs lead alloy
for every one 180 gr bullet there will be one 125 gr bullet
Determine the total number of 180 gr bullets and 125 gr bullets that can be produced from 360 lbs of lead alloy with a Lee 6 cavity mold.
360lbs = (x/2)(180gr+125gr)/7000gr/lb
x/2= (360lbs)(7000gr/lb)/(180gr+125gr)
x/2= 8262
360 lbs can produce 8262 180gr 40S&W bullets and 8262 125gr 9mm bullets
I'm certainly looking forward to shooting for 10 cents per round.