mnbearbaiter said:
Dixie has both the 50cal and 54cal in stock
If you search for the Buffalo Bullet Ball-et you will pull up Dixie Gun Works showing both the .50 and .54 Ball-ets but you will also see that they are no longer in stock since the old Buffalo Bullet Company ceased production in late 2007. They are currently relocating and state that they plan on beginning production in 2018 at which point they will be carrying the .50 Ball-et (Ballete) and other
requested designs. To be clear, the original Ball-et design was a half round, half conical bullet that was dry lubed and needed no patching, with the .54 available in both 310 and 338 grain forms. Only the 50 caliber, half round, half conical design remains and is called the PA Conical;
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/...s-50-caliber-512-diameter-240-grain-box-of-50
While there are some .54 bullets that are labeled Ball-ets, these are either the Great Plains or Minnie ball design and are not the same as the old half round/half conical design. Since the original post requested information pertaining to the .54 Ball-et, unless he can find someone willing to sell him some long forgotten NOS or gift him what they have left they he will either have to wait until next year or try other lead conical in search for something better that a .54 PRB.
As I said before, the depth of the rifling is more important to stabilizing a lead conical than twist rate, if one is willing to try an extremely wide range of powder charges, down to 30 grains (all things considered) in which case the sacrifice in range for accuracy would be inadequate for use as a hunting load.
If you want to shoot lead conical bullets then use a fast twist barrel with shallow rifling, and be prepared for the recoil. Several years ago I had one such rifle in 50 caliber which would tear out the bulls eye at 75 yards shooting a 220 grain Lee REAL bullet over a lubed fiber wad and 95 grains of 3f Goex. I have no doubt that this load would go through a bull elk from shoulder to rump and then exit at lethal velocity, but the recoil was brutal and I was taught to take broadside shots at the heart/lung area of a critter. The accuracy of my .54 using a PRB at 100 yards is just as good, plus I can shoot all day using the same load as I do for hunting and not come home with a dislocated shoulder or deeply bruised bicep.