A fine gent on cgn has two copies of the original Lyman bullet casting book for sale.
If you're a true leadhead, you'll snap one up.
$45 worth of interesting reading.
Back in the mid-sixties, bullet casting was a dying art.
It was only bullseye shooters who did it and Lyman was about the only mould maker, except for Hensley and Gibbs who made moulds for the carriage trade or commercial casters.
Lyman had lots of copies of these books which weren't selling, so they took a truckload of them to the local dump and burned them.
Then came the Gun Control Act of 1968 and it was illegal to ship bullets over state lines, to individuals. So shooters had to start casting their own bullets and the art had a renaissance.
So I always had a soft spot for Lyman for providing us with moulds, and they were virtually the only game in town.
If you're a true leadhead, you'll snap one up.
$45 worth of interesting reading.
Back in the mid-sixties, bullet casting was a dying art.
It was only bullseye shooters who did it and Lyman was about the only mould maker, except for Hensley and Gibbs who made moulds for the carriage trade or commercial casters.
Lyman had lots of copies of these books which weren't selling, so they took a truckload of them to the local dump and burned them.
Then came the Gun Control Act of 1968 and it was illegal to ship bullets over state lines, to individuals. So shooters had to start casting their own bullets and the art had a renaissance.
So I always had a soft spot for Lyman for providing us with moulds, and they were virtually the only game in town.