I use the following two bullets bfor 45 ACP:
200 gr. Lee SWC tumble lube bullet (https://fsreloading.com/lee-6-cavity-tl452-200wc-90379.html)
200 gr. Lee SWC bullet (https://fsreloading.com/lee-6-cav-hg-68-200-swc-90310.html)
Both work equally well in my Kimber Stainless II and Ruger SR1911 and both are available in 6 cavity molds so you can crank out a lot of bullets in a hurry. I use straight wheelweights which I can usually get for free from local garages. I have never had a leading problem using Lee tumble lube (even on non-tumble lube design bullets). Dragon Bullet Lube (site sponsor) sells the equivalent to the Lee stuff very reasonably.
Primers - Winchester large rifle primers - $35/1000
Powder - Alliant Promo - you use this weight for weight the same as Alliant Red Dot. It duplicates Red Dot performance for less money. I am fortunate that I have a dealer locally (John Emmett) who sells it ridiculously cheap ($90/8 pounds). It's a flake powder so it doesn't meter quite as well as Bullseye or 231 but I have had no real problems with that.
I know it sounds light but I use 3.5 grains of Promo and have no problems with consistent ejection from either gun. Accuracy-wise from a PPC barricade rest at 25 yards this load groups in the 2 1/2"-3" range although I have a friend who is an excellent shot who does under 2" consistently.
So my cost is:
bullets - free
brass - probably averages under 1 cent each over the life of the case which people have pointed out is quite long
primer - 3.5 cents per round
powder - 56000 grains (8 pounds) divided by 3.5 = 16000 rounds for $103 (tax in) = .6 cents per round
So... 1 cent + 3.5 cents + .6 cents = 5.1 cents per round X 50 rounds = $2.55 per box of 50 (gee, even I didn't realize it was that cheap
).
Of course you have to buy the casting equipment for the bullets but that is a declining cost as the more bullets you cast the lower the price per bullet is. I would guess that after you have cast 2000-3000 bullets you have easily paid for your casting equipment and if you maintain it well you can use it for years.
If you can get cheap or free casting metal it really drops the price. Even cheap commercially cast bullets at 6 cents each adds $3.00 per box of ammo. That's a lot cheaper than commercial ammo but still way more than casting your own.
200 gr. Lee SWC tumble lube bullet (https://fsreloading.com/lee-6-cavity-tl452-200wc-90379.html)
200 gr. Lee SWC bullet (https://fsreloading.com/lee-6-cav-hg-68-200-swc-90310.html)
Both work equally well in my Kimber Stainless II and Ruger SR1911 and both are available in 6 cavity molds so you can crank out a lot of bullets in a hurry. I use straight wheelweights which I can usually get for free from local garages. I have never had a leading problem using Lee tumble lube (even on non-tumble lube design bullets). Dragon Bullet Lube (site sponsor) sells the equivalent to the Lee stuff very reasonably.
Primers - Winchester large rifle primers - $35/1000
Powder - Alliant Promo - you use this weight for weight the same as Alliant Red Dot. It duplicates Red Dot performance for less money. I am fortunate that I have a dealer locally (John Emmett) who sells it ridiculously cheap ($90/8 pounds). It's a flake powder so it doesn't meter quite as well as Bullseye or 231 but I have had no real problems with that.
I know it sounds light but I use 3.5 grains of Promo and have no problems with consistent ejection from either gun. Accuracy-wise from a PPC barricade rest at 25 yards this load groups in the 2 1/2"-3" range although I have a friend who is an excellent shot who does under 2" consistently.
So my cost is:
bullets - free
brass - probably averages under 1 cent each over the life of the case which people have pointed out is quite long
primer - 3.5 cents per round
powder - 56000 grains (8 pounds) divided by 3.5 = 16000 rounds for $103 (tax in) = .6 cents per round
So... 1 cent + 3.5 cents + .6 cents = 5.1 cents per round X 50 rounds = $2.55 per box of 50 (gee, even I didn't realize it was that cheap
Of course you have to buy the casting equipment for the bullets but that is a declining cost as the more bullets you cast the lower the price per bullet is. I would guess that after you have cast 2000-3000 bullets you have easily paid for your casting equipment and if you maintain it well you can use it for years.
If you can get cheap or free casting metal it really drops the price. Even cheap commercially cast bullets at 6 cents each adds $3.00 per box of ammo. That's a lot cheaper than commercial ammo but still way more than casting your own.
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