Heyall,
I am experiencing some great frustration here, and decided it’s finally time to reach out. I’ll try and be as detailed as possible.
A couple years ago I purchased a Marlin lever action in 45-70. (new) I casted a pile of bullets from the Lee 405 gr mold, which I then tumble lubed with Lee Liquid Alox. I did not size the bullets.
I did some ladder testing with 4198, and settled on a load around 46gr, which was getting me about 1.5 inch groups at 50 yards off the seat of a snowmobile. Good enough for me.
I then loaded up a full box of 50 rounds of that load.
About 6 months ago I was out at the range and I found that the shots were walking on me, and realized that my scope was sliding through the rings. After mitigating the scope issue, I loaded up another box of 50 rounds.
I was out shooting over the last couple weeks, and I cannot get this thing to group. I am seeing flyers all over the place, the best groups I can get ignoring the flyers is about 2 or 3 inches at 50 yards of a bench rest.
I guess my questions are… what kind of accuracy should I expect from this rifle? What could be causing this erratic shooting? Is there a different load that I should be trying?
This gun is primarily my bear hunting rifle, so shots between 50 and 150 yards would my useful range, which currently I cannot trust to make.
The only other thought I had was to buy some bullets and eliminate the casting from the equation, but I find it hard to believe I would see groups like this because of tiny variations in bullet weight.
Thanks for any advice.
> Your load was shooting 1 1/2" @ 50 yards: Now your groups are much larger. Something changed.
- Certainly a good cleaning, to rule that out. I had an -06 that required a phenomenal cleaning session. It does not take much lead to make things go south.
I've dabbled in casting, not for 45-70, but did a fair bit of testing in a 38-55. Bullet size is a factor, anything smaller than groove size is not ideal. As you approach groove size things improve. Ideal is in the at least groove or 0.001 over. In my 38-55 the largest bullet that was usable was app 0.001 under groove. This seemed close enough for sustainable accuracy. I used a gas checked bullet for the most part, but a plain base LEE worked as well. I have used LLA (LEE Liquid Alox) but for my 38-55 I sized and lubed with a 4500. I've used LLA in a 7x57, it worked OK, but eventually I bought the sizing dies and lubed them conventionally.
LEE molds tend to drop near to advertised size. your mold should be dropping a 0.457" bullet. This may be a bit on the small size. Bullet alloy also plays a part. Sometimes your alloy may age soften. This doesn't happen very often, but it can. You bullet, the 457-405-F is not a tumble lube design, hand lubing may make it work better. If your bore is significantly larger than 457, you may have to fool with bullet alloy.
There are improved versions of tumble lube, there seems to be a good following for 45 45 10. Depending on your groove dia. and bullet dia. (both should be measured) painting (powder coating or Hi-Tech) may work best.
Recently I've begun to buy coated bullets from Xmetal, and they work surprisingly well. They are coated with a formulated coating manufactured by Hi-Tech. You can get almost the same results using cheap Princess Auto (Harbor Freight) powder coating, from what I've seen and read online.
The advantage of coated bullets is that they are fairly forgiving, size and alloy become less of a factor.
I've made some assumptions, one is that Marlin groove dia. is usually large, as is the bore. IOW the rifling is shallow. It seems like their Ballard style rifling is just microgroove with fewer grooves. It doesn't take much fouling to make things go south. I suspect that the edge of the rifling is leaded, very hard to see without a bore camera. Also very hard to clean.
Without personal experience, I suspect that you may be on the edge, nearing the bullets limitation with your load. Shooting off the seat of a snowmobile suggests that you may have initially tested in winter. That load may be hotter in warm weather. You may want to back down or even changer powders. In the 38-55 I got 4198 to work, but also got good results with 5744 and 3031 as well. I used SR4759 as well, but it is not an easy powder to find, and not in current production IIRC. I'd try loading to trap door data first, see how things go and progress from there.
I checked the data in Lyman 50 and for a Lyman 405 gr bullet sized @ 458 their max load with IMR-4198 is 40.5 gr for a velocity of 1717 fps. Interestingly the accuracy load is with 32 gr of 5744 for a velocity of 1434 fps. Ruger #1/#3 data goes to 44.5 gr of IMR-4198, max for 1881 fps. Below is a picture from Lyman 50, 45-70 data for the 1895 Marlin.
Lyman data suggested that they used a 20-1 alloy, with a BHN of app 10. For the Trap Door they listed Lyman #2, with a BHN of app 15. Interesting! Higher pressure and velocity, with a softer alloy. If you are using COWW you'd be in the middle.
Shooting cast can be a journey down the rabbit hole, it can also be very satisfying when things work out.