Have you ever shot a "slug" of lead?

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N.Y. Yankee

32 Cal.
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Slug , meaning, just a cylinder of lead the propper diameter, the ends cut square and the same length as the diameter? I would assume it would be patched?
 
A trashcan load, no reason it won't work if you assume you can spin it fast enough to stabilize. The Lee REAL are not far from this concept. And you can say that many revolvers do just this after they shave the round ball down during the loading process.
 
Length the same as the diameter is liable to make it tough to get the bullet to expand into the rifling grooves. On shorties I favor a shallow hollow base.
These are forty bore micro minies.
micro minies.jpg
 
As for the solid square-ended-length-equals-diameter slug, a friend told me once he got his first deer using an 1861 Springfield shooting just such a slug he whittled out of a battery post. This would have been about 1951. He said it worked, but the first chance he got he traded for a proper mould for that musket.
 
I use this flat based pure lead 56 caliber slug paper patched in a full-on target rifle built in 1885. Excellent accuracy, it is pictured next to a 45 Auto cartridge for size comparison
 

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