Air bubbles in cast balls?

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I have a group of cast balls that are 2-3 gns lighter than the rest. I’ve noticed that there are several flyers from this group. A fellow MLer suggested that I may have an air bubble in those balls. So I cut one in half and sure enough there is a small air bubble which I have been told throws off the trajectory. I target shoot for accuracy so this is unacceptable.
What causes the air bubble to occur? What can I do to prevent it?
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It come from how you fill the mold, I found that a bottom pore pot creates the most problems and using a dipper the least. My 525 grain bullets vary by one grain using the dipper but using the bottom pore the best I can get is always much greater. How you use the dipper also is very important.
 
Molds do have preferences on how the lead is poured in, also temperature. Some want shiny balls and bullets. Not me, I want them to come out frosted. That tells me I am running the lead hot enough to more compleletly fill the mold.
If shooting serious competition or working up a load, I weigh the bullets to be sure I have the most consistant projectiles. Other than that, I don't worry about it, as none of us shoot well enough to know the difference when shooting off hand.
 
I heat the Lee mold on a hot plate before casting. I heat the pure lead to 760. I weigh every ball I plan to shoot.
I shoot for accuracy so I try to eliminate all variables off the rifle rest. Then practice offhand knowing flyers are the shooters fault. Have not been able to eliminate that variable yet. 🤷
 
Of the same diameter and similar weight (174)I do assume they do have bubbles.
I’ve cast some that are same diameter but 177-178 grains. I’m assuming they probably do not have bubbles. I’m going to test them.
 
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