Old Smokey
Pilgrim
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2005
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 0
Newbee here, just bought a mold for a 50 cal. It
Zonie said:One of the things that makes heavy elongated muzzleloading bullets work is having a soft lead material.
The bullets need to be soft to permit the light engraving of the rifleing on them. They might even be slightly undersize and still work if they are made from soft lead.
Even if they don't seem to be a tight fit in the bore, they will expand when the powder charge fires because of obteration.
Obteration is simply what happens to an object when the gun fires and is the result of the rear of the bullet wanting to accelerate down the bore. The front of the bullet does not want to move, so something has to give.
What "gives" is the lead in the middle of this arguement. It trys to get out of the way of the disagreement between the rear and the front of the bullet and the only way it can escape is sideways. In other words, the bullet expands tightly into the rifleing.
If you use a hard alloy, this process will not happen resulting in poor accuracy and leading of the bore.
A hard alloy in my .45-70 leads the bore if the alloy is to hard. With softer alloys the leading problem goes away.
Zonie said:My muzzleloading Schuetzen on the other hand has a slightly undersize 430 grain pure lead paper patched bullet which grabs the rifleing without a problem.
Enter your email address to join: