luebkeb
Smoke_maker
Whats a wheel weight ball?They usually stretch the skin on the offside considerably, then spring back. I use wheel weight balls, and they often would fully penetrate.
Whats a wheel weight ball?They usually stretch the skin on the offside considerably, then spring back. I use wheel weight balls, and they often would fully penetrate.
My oldest's first elk was a cow with a .50 hornady bullet. *80 yds the elk ran 80 yds and was dead when tracked but it ran...uphill 80 yds and was not spooked when shot so that theory was debunked in 5BN Hutch Mnt hunt in in about the year 2000. The liver is a very good shot though.Years ago a Dr told me There are no Absolutes in Biology.
Most of the deer I've shot have ran a short distance. A few ran farther, a few fell at the shot.
I read in the early 80s a deer shot in the liver will drop and not get up. I once shot one quartering to and it collapsed. Dressing it the bullet destroyed the liver, maybe its true.
The same applies to other critters, both bigger and smaller.
Wheel weights used to balance the wheels on the car. The weights used to be a mixture of lead. It was easy to come by in the old days and popular for making RB'sWhats a wheel weight ball?
Made from wheel weights, slightly harder aloy.Whats a wheel weight ball?
At least you learned from that experience.As far as differences in facts on shots here is an interesting one. I shot a nice fat cow with that same .50 few years earlier with a prb. 50 yds tree rest. Feeding slowly with a nice herd. Boom! Nobody even looked up? So I thought I missed and it never dawned on me why the boom at 50 yds and the smoke didnt scatter the herd in 4 directions. Reloading as fast as i could behind my tree I veered out for a second shot the cow, still eating, swayed to and fro and fell over dead. Herd finally scattered when I stepped out and walked to the harvest. She never knew she was shot (double lung, no ball as it was a pass thru). Knicked the liver once on a small buck at 180 yds trotting (last day stupid unhonarable decision). Tracked it 4.9 miles into a draw and had to walk a mile out of the way to get down to it and finish it off. Liver knicked just enough to bleed a bit, clot, bed down, circling stupid hunter jumper it svereal times to keep the tiny blood flow going.
DO NOT DISHONOR OUR GAME LIKE I DID. I didn't deserve that buck or the ride back to camp.
More proof the internet only post the TRUTH!! Haha.Wonder what the exit wound looked like on this one...
I was given 4 five gallon buckets of WW years ago, I've been mixing WW and soft lead 50/50 starting then, but only in round ball for smoothbore and rifle. Never in a conical, minie or a revolver ball.I always cast wheel weights into cartridge pistol cals. For M/L balls and maxis I use DEAD SOFT lead. If I can't nick it easily with a thumb nail , it ain't going in my Rifles.......Be Safe>>>Wally
I agree. The steel used today is pretty good!I was given 4 five gallon buckets of WW years ago, I've been mixing WW and soft lead 50/50 starting then, but only in round ball for smoothbore and rifle. Never in a conical, minie or a revolver ball.
I've heard the arguments of shooting a rifle "slick". I don't belive an alloyed ball will do it in a modern Barrel my lifetime.
Eterry, I think you would be just fine with your 50/50 mix. the Antimony & Tin would be a small percentage of 50% of your over all mix. as far as shooting a Rifle Slick,, With the barrels available in the last 100 yrs.Steel has Changed .Now Blacksmiths and Knife makers have dozens of different steels to choose from...I've heard the old stories of old timers shooting a barrel and changing patching material clear up to buckskin..Then carving a new mold out of soap stone,,couldn't have been much rifling left..But if that's all you got you do it. I could see it happening..... Be Safe >>>>>wallyI was given 4 five gallon buckets of WW years ago, I've been mixing WW and soft lead 50/50 starting then, but only in round ball for smoothbore and rifle. Never in a conical, minie or a revolver ball.
I've heard the arguments of shooting a rifle "slick". I don't belive an alloyed ball will do it in a modern Barrel my lifetime.
Worst case scenario...you hit the chest cavity but no serious damage done to vitals or major vessels. Two holes help to ensure a rapid pneumothorax or collapsed lungs and rapid suffocation. I always use Lee REAL conicals and have never recovered one. As a matter of fact, I shot two deer with one slug several years back.I was wondering… Has anyone experienced the lack of penetration with rb? I took a deer today at 106 yds with a 50 cal with 80 grains of goex ffg pushing a patched rb. The ball slipped right through the rib cage smashing the heart before stopping against the back wall of the ribs. Granite, it was a bit far of a shot with traditional iron sights, for me at least, but I felt comfortable enough to take it so I did. It’s not just farther shots though. Most deer I shoot are less than 30 yards and I’ve yet to see one of my rb’s exit the animal. Anyone experiencing the same? I know a rb doesn’t weigh much.
That's actually a pretty ideal situation for the distance you were shooting. Your lead ball expended ALL of its energy inside your quarry. And it killed him pretty efficiently didn't it. If your round ball goes through and through, then it didn't dump most of its energy inside the quarry and wasted the remnants of its energy outside the quarry where it has no effect on him. Best efficiency is when your round ball (usually flattened pretty well) is found just under the skin opposite the entry wound. A load like the one you are using killed many thousands of deer during the ~200+ years it was the norm.I was wondering… Has anyone experienced the lack of penetration with rb? I took a deer today at 106 yds with a 50 cal with 80 grains of goex ffg pushing a patched rb. The ball slipped right through the rib cage smashing the heart before stopping against the back wall of the ribs. Granite, it was a bit far of a shot with traditional iron sights, for me at least, but I felt comfortable enough to take it so I did. It’s not just farther shots though. Most deer I shoot are less than 30 yards and I’ve yet to see one of my rb’s exit the animal. Anyone experiencing the same? I know a rb doesn’t weigh much.
I'm still learning, I assembled my first kit in 1980 and started casting the same time.Eterry, I think you would be just fine with your 50/50 mix. the Antimony & Tin would be a small percentage of 50% of your over all mix. as far as shooting a Rifle Slick,, With the barrels available in the last 100 yrs.Steel has Changed .Now Blacksmiths and Knife makers have dozens of different steels to choose from...I've heard the old stories of old timers shooting a barrel and changing patching material clear up to buckskin..Then carving a new mold out of soap stone,,couldn't have been much rifling left..But if that's all you got you do it. I could see it happening..... Be Safe >>>>>wally
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