Once upon a time the forest land of northern Canada was laced with small sawmills, usually powered by a steam engine.
Everyone of these little mills required pouring babbit bearings from time to time. The babbit material was nearly identical to the lead alloys we pour bullets with.
The operators of these outfits soon learned how to get the metal at the right temperature and they all used the same method of judging temperature.
They cut a sliver from a dry, seasoned piece of pine. They pushed this sliver of wood into the hot metal and counted to three, then took it out. The color of the sliver when it came out should be about the color of the crust on fresh baked bread.
That was the ideal temperature for pouring bearings, or for making lead bullets.
Babbit for bearings is a much different alloy than lyman #2.
Real babbit for bearing is usually 86% tin, 7% copper, 7% antimony or a close approximation there of.
My grandfather and father could pour babbit bearings and they had a stock of babbit alloy. It made bullets that would ring.
I would add 1/4 oz of babbit alloy to my wheel weight alloy in the late 1960s to make my 30-30 bullets harder.