DWS, My research and general expertise with these sorts of bullets is nil and not improving a lot. I started with the RCBS 312 spire point. It did not shoot well and I sold the mold. That was last year's experience. And my suspicions are that the mold was fine, but my reloading techniques were a big part of the problem (excessive run out in loaded cartridges). This year, I started with the Lyman 250 gr FN bullet - partly because I like FN bullets, partly because I thought I'd work up a load for targets and then take it antelope hunting as well. That bullet has been a real wrestling match and finally, with a lot of help from Pete, it shoots sorta antelope-okay but it's not competitive on targets. I got some persistent leading and finally Pete, who was having similar problems, figurred out that the bullet can be lube-sized as per normal and then resized in a .222 seating die and leading will be gone and accuracy improved. This helped for me, but I found that I had to use the FL die instead of the seating die. It gives a stronger taper. Now, the bullet is usable for antelope but still not competitive. So, in a bit of frustration, I bought a tapered 316 gr Hoch mold from CPA since they have them in stock and boy does this do a lot better in fixed ammo and with my new Leverton-style breech seater. With the breach seating, I immediately added 10 points to my bench scores using the very first load/powder combination that came to hand. But I'm still not quite competitive using bp against the smokeless crowd (I will not shoot smokeless). I'm thinking about using the Hoch bullet on antelope, but in fixed ammo, there is not a lot of powder (42 gr of 3fg Swiss highly compressed), and trajectory will be tough to work with, plus it's a pointish roundnose. Not optimal, but darn it shoots. I'm off to the range in a few minutes to try one more 250 FN load and decide which bullet it shall be for the hunt. But for targets, I'm breech seating. That said, the hoch mold has many narrow grooves that are deep enough that they are not engraved by the rifling, unlike Garbe's bullet. I think Garbe's idea has lots of merit though, and I would consider it, but I think I'll go back to paper patches if I do yet another bullet in the .38. Brent
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