Pulling a lot of cast bullets - pictures

stickhunter

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Victoria, B.C.
I recently received a box of 500+ unknown reloads that I wanted to pull so I could recycle the brass and bullets. I have a Hornady Cam Lock bullet puller that worked well-enough for the jacketed bullets, but it wouldn't budge the cast loads with a roll/taper crimp. The cast lead was so soft/slippery, that the jaws of the bullet puller would just swage the bullet down as it slipped through. I was also not relishing the noise and mess of hammering hundreds of bullets out with an inertial puller.

Since I was going to re-melt the cast bullets, I wasn't concerned about damaging them, so I decided to try pulling them with side cutter pliers. Unfortunately, my press' ram and shell holder were too short to raise the bullet high enough to grasp:

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I had a 1 1/4" deep socket which ended working perfectly --- the ram could extend up the socket and the bullet came through the 3/8" drive opening where I could grasp it with the cutters:

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I mounted the press temporarily on a saw horse so I could use my hip to push the handle in, lowering the ram, while I griped the cutters:

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I won't say it was effortless, but it saved my hands and back, and I was able to pull about 3 bullets per minute:

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A couple of rules-of-thumb that i learned over the course of a couple of hours of work:

  1. Arrange your workspace efficiently so you don't have to move much or bend over: I had the cartridges in my pocket and an ice cream pail to catch the powder and a shelf to place the bullet and case.
  2. Don't be shy taking a good bite into the bullet as it's going to be damaged anyways and your best chance at a pull is to make a good first impression.
  3. Don't keep struggling with obstinate bullets; put them aside and keep moving on as you want to develop a rhythm and maximize your output.
  4. At the end, revisit the tough bullets; I found pressing the bullet in with a vise, using a shell holder to prevent touching the primer, sometimes helped break it free for the next pull attempt.

When it was all said and done, I ended up with 11 cartridges that I just couldn't pull before the lead cut away --- those will go into the range's burn bucket.

Here's a pic of the setup I used for getting some of the really stuck bullets moving:

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Was it worth the effort? Absolutely not, but I'm a stubborn person and I don't like letting things go to waste. That being said, I'd never accept another person's reloads unless I desperately needed the brass.
 
I had a bunch of reloaded ammunition that wasn’t mine so decided to sit down and dismantle them. I used the hammer puller. Took over two hours and into the third drink of rum. I actually found it relaxing as I wasn’t in any hurry

I think you've got the right idea! Definitely turn it into a meditative practice. I actually don't have a hammer puller primarily because I do all my reloading work at night when the family is asleep ;). The rum advice is duly noted and I will ad that to my procedure!
 
Was it worth the effort? Absolutely not, but I'm a stubborn person and I don't like letting things go to waste. That being said, I'd never accept another person's reloads unless I desperately needed the brass.

Haha, awesome, thanks for sharing!
 
I had to pull a bunch of my own that I had loaded with bad powder. I used the side cutter method and then just for the hell of it I but 50 or so through a sizer die and reloaded them with the gouge in them. When I took them to the range and shot them out of a revolver they worked great. I had worse days with non gouged lead. Some auto loaders might have an issue but lead is pretty slippery.
 
Great "hack"! Thanks for sharing.

Sometimes we need to damage one component to save another one we really want. I've seen solutions on CGN on how to save a stubborn bullet, but sacrifice the brass, and now how to save the brass and sacrifice the bullet.
 
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I found running the stubborn ones through a Lee factory crimp die loosened them to where they would pull without much fuss. I use an RCBS collet puller, not sure if the Hornady is better or worse. Typically I had no issues pulling lead aside from SWC and stuff I just couldn't get a bite on. Simply wiping/brushing the bullet and collet surface can go a very long way towards getting and maintaining a good grip as well.
 
I found running the stubborn ones through a Lee factory crimp die loosened them to where they would pull without much fuss. I use an RCBS collet puller, not sure if the Hornady is better or worse. Typically I had no issues pulling lead aside from SWC and stuff I just couldn't get a bite on. Simply wiping/brushing the bullet and collet surface can go a very long way towards getting and maintaining a good grip as well.

Good advice. I did find the SWC and truncated cone bullets to be the most challenging as tightening the collet would sometimes force the bullet and cartridge down due to the taper. I didn't try wiping the bullets, but you're right that any wax/lube residue should be removed first. One other thing I thought about was giving the bullets a quick wipe with Clover grinding compound to increase the friction, but I decided that might be too messy and not worth the risk of getting it onto the press or pullet and causing undue wear.
 
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