Really thin powder coating results

fingers284

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I purposely coated some 350 gr (plain c. o. WW) .458 slugs a thin as I could get them and still have a total shank coverage to try a "barrel leading" test.

These slugs dropped from the Lee mold at .458 and after a very quick pray with the gun and cooked, they were still only at .459. The powder was surplus J.D. Yellow from a commercial coater in a generic pail so don't know the particulars on it. With this quick thin coating the yellow was pretty much a thin translucent covering on the slug, you could see the lead thru it. It has to be thin to only mike .001 thicker than dropped dia., that only allows .0005 actual thickness on the walls. I didn't think a "thickness" that thin would be doable but I have about 180 slugs and can randomly pick anyone of them and get the same readings.

I loaded up a 50 rnd box of these last week and for fathers day set up a target and spent the entire afternoon just shooting them thru my 1895 Cowboy. Now this was not a "high velocity" test so your opinion of the results might be a little tempered and I understand that but for 99% of the shooting I do it is appropriate. These round were at 15-1600 fps.

The meat of the thing is that after 50 rounds there was not a speck of leading visible in the barrel.

The second aspect of the test was testing accuracy of these loads...new powder ( AA 5744 as my supply of SR2759 is dwindling) and my first kick at the cat with these slugs. Group size was around 2", completely acceptable to me considering that they were better than I expected with iron sights & one old eye.
 
I have tried 4198 as well as 3031 and 4895 in previous accuracy testing and seem to have found that they all need to be at the "upper echelons" of the 45-70 fps to get good consistent accuracy. The resulting increase in recoil gets to be annoying in an 40 round lever-gun sillywet shoot in one afternoon. The rounds in the above test are actually faster (1500) than I usually strive for which is usually in the 1200 fps area and SR 4759 or AA5744 are the most consistent at that velocity.
 
I've been coating .314" .303BR bullets to get them up to .316" to fit an oversize bore rifle. Tumble coat, stood in a tray for baking. Groups with the .312 uncoated were 5-6"in at 100yds with keyholing. The .314" coated bullets grouped 3-4" at 100 yds, and the .316" coated bullets got down into the 2-3" range with no key holing. Velocity 1600fps. When I push them faster the groups start to open up again. Still need to work on that.
 
I know I have posted this before...the most I have added to a slug is to bump up 200 gr., .452 pistol bullets to .459 ( 3 coatings) and have had spectacular results of accuracy. The particular gun I used for the initial test is a Marlin Cowboy that shoots most anything I have fed thru it from .330 gr to 450 into an honest 2" most days, however with those bumped up pistol bullets it will shoot into a cloverleaf all day...a bona-fide 100 yrd. gopher gun.

This past weekend I shot some of those pistol slugs thru an old 1886 45-70 (ser. #'s to 1888) and a 1871 RB with a new barrel on it and hit a lot of 8-10 inch gongs at different distances out to 100 yrds...cant claim a group size as I didn't print any on paper.

200 gr slugs through a 45-70 sure are a joy to shoot a long string of...recoil less than a .223
 
Iv always ended up with a thin coat on my .430 and .311 bullets and have never experienced leading. I use the shake and bake method and really struggle to get a thick coat with gloss black
 
I have been fiddling with tumble powder coating for a bit now, I have found dark pigment colours tend
To go on thin and light colours go on thicker, lime green I have found to coat very evenly. Flat black goes on
Very thin but if you do a flash cure then recoat you can get a good coating.
 
I cannot bring myself to re-powder coat. Im using Emerald Coatings “tool blue” with outstanding results.
I believe ElvisAmmo pioneered the pre-heating of the bullets method. It works every time.

Tool blue gives a nice overall coating, & while I still run them through a suitable diameter sizer, I do not miss tumble lubing them at all. Gone forever is all that nasty crayon lube, tumble lube & the never-ever-dries liquid alox. Phooey to all that!
 
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