Idaho Ron
58 Cal.
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2007
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My 45's are a 1-30 twist and the 50's are 1-28.Ron, i'm sure you've covered this before, but can you quickly tell me what twist your 45 and 50 cal barrels are?
Thanks.
My 45's are a 1-30 twist and the 50's are 1-28.Ron, i'm sure you've covered this before, but can you quickly tell me what twist your 45 and 50 cal barrels are?
Thanks.
Soft lead, even from a 58, will not reliably penetrate the shoulder of big game, many times flattening out like a quarter and not penetrating, leaving a long tracking job or wounded game.
A harder lead won't "pencil thru" because it starts out larger than most modern boolits end up.
The way I know that the lead I shoot in my Musketoon and ROA is soft is that
a. It is usually from recovered H&N airgun pellets - I get given around fifteen/twenty pounds at a time by a local airgun club. The packaging, and the product is sold, as purest soft lead, and being German, it had better be nothing less.
OR
b. It is spare lead recovered from our local parish church. Having been robbed of its lead at least three times in ten years by 'removal and redistribution specialists' from the regional 'travelling community', the whole roof was re-covered with the otherwise worthless fake lead look-alike, and all the genuine stuff offered to anybody who wanted it. I ended up with about a 1/4 ton, which I spread out among my fellow ML-ers. I have enough to keep me going until sometime in 2148.
You are right. Soft lead Like in the Hornady Great plains bullets pancake. These bullets are the 50 cal 410 grain that was discontinued.
They were both shot through the ribs and were found under the skin on the off side. Both had lot a lot of weight, over 50 grains each. This was on this deer.
I really liked the 410's but I saw this kind of over expansion on flat tipped bullets. When they discontinued the 410 there was no way I was going to use the 385. I had made up my mind that the 410 was not a bullet I would use on even deer, and the 385 in my opinion was a varmint bullet with the hollow point.
My thought too, but no practical experience yet.A harder lead won't "pencil thru" because it starts out larger than most modern boolits end up.
.
What about using fishing weights? Is that soft enough? We live near the beach and always have some we find. Plus it the end of the season so a lot of weights are on clearance
So what am I missing?
Wonder why the manufacturers of traditional guns and the makers of molds all recommend pure soft lead?
Must be a reason.
If the mold is for a muzzleloading projectile it is designed/sized to throw a certain diameter bullet or ball using pure lead. If you use wheel weights or a lead alloy the bullet/ball will be a different diameter than what is called for. Bullets shrink when they leave the mold & cool, so what you put in the mold can determine what size bullet you get. Molds for hard lead cast bullets used in cartridge guns are a different animal & are built to use the harder lead alloys & the bullets are then "sized" to what you need for a particular bore, if your alloy doesn't "throw true". Using pure lead in a mold designed for it eliminates the need to size after casting & that's about all.So what am I missing?
Wonder why the manufacturers of traditional guns and the makers of molds all recommend pure soft lead?
Must be a reason.
Just buy the darn balls already!What about using fishing weights?
Is that soft enough?
We live near the beach and always have some we find. Plus it the end of the season so a lot of weights are on clearance
I agree but we also metal detect on the beach. We have at least 25lbs of sinkersJust buy the darn balls already!
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