Which do you think casts the better ball, a Callahan type bag mold or the production molds by Lyman, Lee and others?
I've Rapine bag molds that give me a sphere that is as good as my Lyman mold, and a Callahan mold also does a very good job, BUT as Rifleman1776 points out, the end product will be "crude".... this is because the bag molds are reproduction 18th century tech. The sprue is cut off with a scissor like portion in the joint of the mold opposite the mold itself. That's never going to be consistent. A Lyman or Lee or RCBS steel mold with a sprue cutting gate..., when properly maintained..., is going to give you that consistency.Results of bag moulds are, at best, crude. They should remain in the bag, IMHO. Production moulds produce quality results.
You've obviously never used a bag mold, or at least were doing something wrong if you did use one. I get good results using even my cheap "made in India" TOTW mold. In fact several deer I've killed using the balls from that mold never knew the difference.Results of bag moulds are, at best, crude. They should remain in the bag, IMHO. Production moulds produce quality results.
I lot of folks don't like Lee molds, but I have several for round ball, conical and even modern bullets. I have never had a problem with them.Lee molds-when you can find them-produce pretty consistent quality round balls. And they are inexpensive. I was lucky to find a .390 Lee mold for my .40 cal poor boy last summer at a lgs. Much of the quality of the ball depends on the alloy.
The people who don't like Lee molds are either uppity snobs who think it can't be good unless you spend big bucks on it, or who have never used a Lee mold, or some combination of both.I lot of folks don't like Lee molds, but I have several for round ball, conical and even modern bullets. I have never had a problem with them.
Really? Pretty bold and overreaching blanket statement.The people who don't like Lee molds are either uppity snobs who think it can't be good unless you spend big bucks on it, or who have never used a Lee mold, or some combination of both.
"Buy once, cry once."Better quality is easy to obtain but it does cost more. But you get what you pay for in the long run. I don't need the inconvenience.
Enter your email address to join: