Thanks to all who have chimed in on this discussion - it has been a good learning experience for me.
For anything made with an alloy, true statement.I just weighed a bag of cast .530 balls from an unknown source, and about 30 were underweight by a grain or more. Also, I used to read a lot on Castboolits forum about hardness of pure lead being somewhat dependent upon the method used to cool the newly casted items. If I recall, dropping from the mould into water would make them somewhat harder. Also they claimed that old lead castings are harder than fresh ones.
Why is the sprue a problem?Is there any way for casters to swage their own balls (no joking now)? Since the problems are the casting flash and the sprue is there a way to swage out the sprue to improve the roundness of a ball?
Back in the dark ages, my hair was dark red not gray as now, the was a swaging device sold. It had a mold to cast a lead rod. The swaging plates had a cut off plate to make lead slugs of the correct size. The slug was placed on the spherical cavity and the plates indexed together. With your desired hammer you smashed the plates together and swaged a round ball. Often the ball would have the lead flash around it and the ball would be placed on a sizing hole and driven through to remove the flash.
Judging by how many are around and used all these years later, the home swaging process was not much of a success. Its much easier to cast balls in a mold.
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