Used .375 Hornady Swaged balls for years.Always Miked a few form new boxes. Never hd any problems.Same with .44. Not used any .535. Last bought 2021..
But which size do they identify as??A guy sent me a mold that cast really lopsided balls on a trade one time, I was really bummed about being taken, when I found this out time had passed and I couldn't remember who sent me the bad mold.
I will be danged; those lopsided balls shoot as good or better than the .535 balls I shoot that I cast out of a Lee mold. The lopsided ones are .526 on one side and .535 on the other.
Shoot a few of those balls, you might be surprised.
But which size do they identify as??
That's the thing about roundball. They don't have to be perfect to shoot well. Those old timers making a few balls in the evening, after supper using a junky looking mold, knew that.Just my experiences but I've found "ugly" ball to shoot just as well as the nice ones that fall from my mold. They shouldn't but they do.
I've pulled and pushed out many round balls and they are still round.The “round” ball isn’t very round once it is loaded. I imagine you re-swage the ball on loadingenough to make this sort of issue moot.
Your eyes can't measure in a thousandth of an inch. They're not perfectly round anymore, and when they get slapped on the behind by BP they're definitely not going to be a ball when they exit the muzzle. Obturation.I've pulled and pushed out many round balls and they are still round.
i have recovered many balls fired, struck cardboard, buried in snow, and still round enough to put in the mold they came out of and close tight. my ball/patch combination is such that any obturation would shred a patch.Your eyes can't measure in a thousandth of an inch. They're not perfectly round anymore, and when they get slapped on the behind by BP they're definitely not going to be a ball when they exit the muzzle. Obturation.
Whether you believe it's happening or not, it's happening. I can see if you're using small ball/thick patch where there is a chance it wouldn't be overly dramatic, but it is happening.i have recovered many balls fired, struck cardboard, buried in snow, and still round enough to put in the mold they came out of and close tight. my ball/patch combination is such that any obturation would shred a patch.
Now, i will have to really pay attention and see if obturation is measurable. Sigh. used to be such a simple sport.
Good on Hornady, that's some top tier customer service right there .Update! 2 days after I emailed hornady the pics, I got a new box of .535 balls that are a-ok!
An obvious difference!
Hey Frontier. I'm going to go out on a limb here, but first, remember I'm from Australia, and things spin differently down here. We have a fellow at the club who doesn't like the look of sprues on his cast round balls (me, I just place the sprue up each time). What he does is place 100 freshly cast balls inside a sock, yep, you heard right, a sock. Then, holding onto each end of the sock, he runs the balls backwards and forwards for a few minutes while watching TV. Just running them back and forth, mind, not thumping them hard into each other - just let gravity and the balls do the work rubbing against each other. I couldn't believe it when he showed me, but hey presto, a few minutes and no sprue marks, lovely and round. Perhaps give that a go if you haven't sent them all back? Interesting stuff here hey? What a beaut forum!Do your balls have this crap center line? This edge is very noticeable and will make loading them more difficult to center up.
Always wanted to try the 535s before buying the mold, and it seems I got taken.
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