Philip A.
36 Cl.
This forum is a treasure trove of good info... Almost all the questions I can think of can be sorted with a quick search, often going sidewise into a rabbit hole of ancient and modern knowledge, one of the best fireams forums I've seen.
On the topic of hard cast, flat-nosed bullets, I only found a thread from 2009, and a few mentions here and there.
Did someone successfully found a way to make hard cast bullets that work in a muzzleloader?
I'm thinking of differential casting, like first pouring the hard core in the mold with a sleeve, so that it leaves a space between the core and the sides of the bullet, then removing the sleeve and making a second pour of soft lead to make the body (and driving bands) of the bullet.
The reason is, after years of serious hunting with all sorts of calibers and bullets, I've seen what works best on tough, big game: it's a hard, wide, flat nose. Will penetrate deeper and straighter than any round nose or deforming bullet, and make much bigger holes than expected from caliber size.
On the topic of hard cast, flat-nosed bullets, I only found a thread from 2009, and a few mentions here and there.
Did someone successfully found a way to make hard cast bullets that work in a muzzleloader?
I'm thinking of differential casting, like first pouring the hard core in the mold with a sleeve, so that it leaves a space between the core and the sides of the bullet, then removing the sleeve and making a second pour of soft lead to make the body (and driving bands) of the bullet.
The reason is, after years of serious hunting with all sorts of calibers and bullets, I've seen what works best on tough, big game: it's a hard, wide, flat nose. Will penetrate deeper and straighter than any round nose or deforming bullet, and make much bigger holes than expected from caliber size.
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