Find some roofers, old roofing lead comes in sheets and has very little tin content.
Several years ago I was gearing up to start casting bullets and one of my prime sources of lead was a plumber friend of a guy I worked for.He had many 100's of pounds of old lead pipe as he did a lot of retro-fits on older buildings.Not sure if that still goes today but depending on location there could still be a fair bit of this stuff being replaced?I think it would be worth a call to a plumber just in case.I think plumbers use pure or soft lead as well.
Graydog
I have some sheet lead close to pure I think ir's listed as 99.6
$1.50 a lb very clean was lead lining for xray room
retail was over $6/sq '
supermag
Are you selling it? I used to get it from some demolition guys but my source dried up.I have some sheet lead close to pure I think ir's listed as 99.6
$1.50 a lb very clean was lead lining for xray room
retail was over $6/sq '
supermag
It's $1.50 a lb. here, not in ingot form but that's ok. Just have to find a seller for small amounts of it.Right now the market price of lead is 92 cents a pound. Retail price for new lead from a supplier/warehouse in smaller quantities/ingots should be around $1.50 to $2/lb.
I recently took in a whole bunch of old car batteries into a scrapper and was paid 35 cents/lb (lead went down this month, so today the price is only 30 cents/lb I think). They also pay more for clean lead. So for them to sell nice clean lead isn't going to be cheap.



























