LEE 40 Smith and Wesson 145 grain vs 175 grain TL vs 175 TC bullet?

hatman1793

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LEE makes three 40S&W molds. A two (2) cavity 145 SWC, & two (6) cavity 175 grain molds, one a tumble lube (TL) mold, the other a truncated cone forty.
I would prefer the lighter 145 bullet but it cannot compete with the two six cavity molds for production volume.

My question is about the two 6 cavity molds. Some TL molds offer excellent bullets, some don’t...

Is the 175 TL bullet any good? Is it better or worse than the 175 TC? Preferences?
Thoughts?
 
The reason lighter bullets are better in 40S&W is to minimize the snappieness that is inherent in 180 grain 40’s.
The recoil from 180 grain 40S&W cartridges is not far off 45acp. 200 grain 45’s have the edge over 180 40’s.
Going to a much lighter 40 bullet turns 40 into 9mm recoil.
I bought my CZ 75 B because I wanted the power of the 40s/w. If want to shoot a 9 m/m I will get it out. I don’t see the point in downloading a pistol except for wadcutters in my 38’s or 44 rem mag. I don’t find the recoil of the 40 hard to handle.
 
The tumble lube bullets leaded up my pistol pretty badly. Apparently it's common with the .40. I shoot conventionally lubed bullets now, with carnauba red, and it's better, though still not perfect.
 
I've casted thousands of the Lee 175gr TL & 175greaser variety over the last 10+ years for plinking purposes out of 40 & 10mm.

Cavities have been lapped to .402" w/ linotype projectiles for better sizing/fit.

I tumble lube in my Alox blend & greasers w/ my lube blend.

I cast them at 18Bhn & haven't had any issues running them thru my SIG P226's/229's & S&W 610,1006's,1076.
 
My question is the suitability of LEE’s 175 TL bullet vs their 175 TC bullet. Which is better? Many reloaders go to lighter-than-standard bullets for untold varieties of reasons. Why not?
Dropping cast bullets in a pail of water only hardens the surface by 1-2 BNH. Go view FortuneCookie45LC’s video on it. Besides extra hard lead is not an issue if you powder coat your castings.
 
Op,
Depending on one's equipment.
Lee states that their molds are manufactured so the projectiles do not need to be sized,just tumble lubed in ALOX.

Water quenching & composition of alloy will predict Bhn hardness along w/ diameter & weight variances.

A few percent of arsenic & heat treating will make projectiles hard w/o breakage issues.
 
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