I just bought a Jeff Tanner mold, a very nice mold by the way, tried it out this morning.
Bottom line I had some problems with my current casting set-up, Coleman stove, cast iron lead pot, Lee dipper. I have cast thousands of smaller caliber balls with setup with no problems. Today I got a lot of sunken voids in the top my balls, frosting on top with the sprue more the consistency of dross than solid lead. My lead is recovered lead from the berm of the range they hold the Alabama state M/L championships at. Mostly very soft stuff with a few projectiles thrown in that obviously have some wheel weight lead in them because they didn't deform much on impact.
I tried real hot lead and the mold so hot it took several minutes for the lead to solidify, got pretty much the same results, not all the time but 50% of the time.
I traced part of my problem to my using a Lee lead dipper which just doesn't have enough capacity to pour a 512 gr ball evenly and quickly.
I am looking for a better ladle, the Lyman says it holds between 1 and 1.5 oz, a.700 ball weighs 1.12 oz so I wonder if this ladle is big enough to handle the task. Anybody use one on large caliber balls?
I found if I rocked the mold side to side just as I filled it the voids didn't appear.
I weighed all the balls I cast, they all weigh the very close same at 512gr with only a grain or two deviation, Even the ones with the dross like sprue, which breaks right off when I drop the balls from the mold, weigh 512gr.
I guess my main questions would be; Any tips to make this large caliber casting go more consistently and is the Lyman ladle adequate or is there another one better suited to the task.
Bottom line I had some problems with my current casting set-up, Coleman stove, cast iron lead pot, Lee dipper. I have cast thousands of smaller caliber balls with setup with no problems. Today I got a lot of sunken voids in the top my balls, frosting on top with the sprue more the consistency of dross than solid lead. My lead is recovered lead from the berm of the range they hold the Alabama state M/L championships at. Mostly very soft stuff with a few projectiles thrown in that obviously have some wheel weight lead in them because they didn't deform much on impact.
I tried real hot lead and the mold so hot it took several minutes for the lead to solidify, got pretty much the same results, not all the time but 50% of the time.
I traced part of my problem to my using a Lee lead dipper which just doesn't have enough capacity to pour a 512 gr ball evenly and quickly.
I am looking for a better ladle, the Lyman says it holds between 1 and 1.5 oz, a.700 ball weighs 1.12 oz so I wonder if this ladle is big enough to handle the task. Anybody use one on large caliber balls?
I found if I rocked the mold side to side just as I filled it the voids didn't appear.
I weighed all the balls I cast, they all weigh the very close same at 512gr with only a grain or two deviation, Even the ones with the dross like sprue, which breaks right off when I drop the balls from the mold, weigh 512gr.
I guess my main questions would be; Any tips to make this large caliber casting go more consistently and is the Lyman ladle adequate or is there another one better suited to the task.