H4831, care to expand a bit on why you didn't like the Lee mold and tumble lubing? I haven't done any bullet casting so I really don't know other than what I read here and in books. (I have to Lyman Cast Bullet handbook). Tumbling SOUNDS so easy!
Lyman molds are precission cut from steel and come with seperate handles. A reasonable amount of care will keep them going for many years--I know. Some bullets are a bit hard to remove from the mold. The 30 calibre ones I have used, and the 357 bullets, just fall out of the mold. The standard bullets for the 44 magnum are hard to get out. Even with the molds in perfect condition, the heat at proper temperature and the alloy well fluxed, I still have to use either a wooden stick or a rubber hammer, to whack the mold handles to get the bullets to fall out. The Lyman has stood years of this with no sign of damage.
I got an aluminum Lee mold for the 45-70, because, for one thing, the advertising stated the bullets fell out of the mold! Well food luck, mine didn't! After about 100 bullets with TLC use of my rubber hammer, the mold and handles combination is in rough shape.
Since the Lee sizer and lubricater comination was considerable less than the cost of a Lyman die for my sizer/lubricator, I bought the Lee for the 45-70 bullet.
"Just dribble allox on the bullets in a tub," the instructions state, then after shaking them around, put them out on a wax paper to dry, overnight. Slow and messy operation.
Now size them through their awkward little sizer. Oh yes, that will remove the allox lubricant from the vital areas of the bullet, so go through the procedure to relubricate them. Messy and slow, as another night has elapsed.
My observation on seating the bullets were that the case neck had again removed the allox lube from the vital parts of the bullet! But the nose of the bullet and the base, where lube is not wanted, was sure lubed good. Oh, and did I mention how messy the seating dies get from the scraped off allox?
What more would you like to know?
I agree, but I'll add that Lee has a press mounted sizing die that works quite well.
Lee's tumble lube bullet design,the bullets designed specifically for tumble lube, just don't shoot well in the one rifle I have tried them in.
I have a number of Lee molds, some of them drop bullets quite well, some have to be beat on with a hardwood dowel fairly stoutly, even though they have been 'smoked' as directed. This is with a wide variety of melts I have used too.
They do make decent bullets in the end however, just not as easy as the Lyman molds, and in particular, my favorites, the Lyman gang molds.There are mold treatments available, and it may solve the stuck bullet issue, but I have never tried them.
The Lee molds can be spalled by hard lead or impurities, under the sprue plate too.