Big JD-From the hills said:
In reply to pp's post, The spurr cutter is steel, unless im crazy. Maby Im cutting the spurs to soon... I don't knock it with a stick, I just open them by hand(ofcoarse I use gloves). I will try your method one of these days(wait, and then strike with a 30 degree angle.)
Just went into my place and stuck a magnet to the sprue plate
I was misled: the Lee's commercial six holes molds open with a cam and had an alloy sprue plate and I thought it was the same with the single and double molds.
Obviously, Richard Lee didn't think alloy sprue plates weren't stiff enough to resist the pounding from a mallet.
I use a 12" stick resembling those used by fishermen to whack big catches, only smaller. One of my friends made it for me from hard maple and I wound a wet untreated leather rope around its striking surface.
It works like a charm and doesn't deform the sprue plate.
If you want to get rid of the lead stuck under the sprue plate, just heat it slowly with a soldering torch and wipe it on a dry shoprag, then smear anti-seize compound on its surface and rub it thin before remounting on the block.
For a small LEE block, I heat it by holding it just above the molten metal or simply dip a corner into the metal: when alloy doesn't stick to it anymore, it is hot enough.
I also have a small secondary burner on which I have put an old cast iron stove ring and the mold sits there while the other gets filled. I put a small chunk of solder on it and when it melts, i just lower the flame a tad and it is in the right heat range.
Good luck!
PP.