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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) lighter weight "chicken" bullet (Read 80424 times)
feather
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #75 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 2:46pm
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Hi Pete,

Installment 2: Volume and Compression

I’m not at all surprised that you got the same velocity when you switched to Remington cases and reduced the powder charge by 3 grains.  Remington cases have less powder capacity than Winchester cases.  If you think about it, black powder has always been a volume-oriented propellant.  When you reduced the powder charge and used a case with less powder capacity, you maintained or nearly maintained the same volume charge.  We weigh our charges and try to obtain a certain weight but we really only do that to get a consistent volume.  Some ammunition loaders who are skilled in the use of powder measures can obtain very consistent volume measurements and they get very good accuracy.  Others are unable to get charges within two or three grains with any consistency.  Those loaders, myself included, weigh charges to get consistent volume.

As for compression, I believe it is powder oriented.  Have you ever loaded a cartridge with a powder having a very specific powder charge weight and then opened another can of the same granulation only to find that the same weight bulked up the powder column an additional 0.125” because the powder was from another lot?  The charcoal in the new can wasn’t as dense as the previous powder lot.  Do you maintain the original charge weight and compress the powder more or do you reduce the powder charge to maintain the same amount of compression?  My experience compels me to reduce the powder charge and maintain the same compression and accuracy rarely suffers.

I compress my powders very little because I don’t want to fracture the granulations and change the burning characteristics of the powder.  Currently, I use zero compression with Swiss 3F powder; zero to 0.020” compression with Swiss 1-1/2 powder; 0.040” compression with Goex 2F powder and 0.125” compression with Goex 1F powder.  I know many shooters are compressing their powder a lot more than that and having very good success with it.  Except for the book instructing people how the Frankford Arsenal loaded 45-70 government ammunition with massive compression, all the other old reloading manuals that I have access to stipulate that you should compress but not crush the powder.  I suspect that without the compound leverage of today’s presses, very few powder columns could be compressed as much as some are by using unassisted straight-line pressure.  Without some kind of mechanical advantage, I doubt that shooters of yesteryear could compress their powders that much.

feather
  
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feather
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #76 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 2:51pm
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Hi again Pete,

Installment 3: Bullet Tension and Primers

I have tried numerous methods of applying tension to the bullet because I didn’t want the bullet falling out of the case when I handled the cartridges.  I’ve used taper crimps, roll crimps, full length resizing die crimps and even the factory crimp die that one company sells.  I think the company is Lee, but don’t hold me to that.  It’s on one of the shelves in my reloading room somewhere.  At the present time, I neck size all my cases and expand them with an expander plug that is 0.001” smaller that the diameter of my bullet.  This practice has given me the most consistent and most accurate tension.  It is extremely important that the case necks be completely clean to provide consistent bullet pull.  None of my rifles shoot well with a lot of bullet tension.  Little or none seems to work best.

When I first began shooting black powder cartridges in silhouette matches you were in the dark ages if you weren’t using magnum rifle primers.  They worked okay in my 45-70 but when I started working with the 38-50 I discovered that they were too potent for the smaller capacity case.  I started using standard large rifle primers and that eliminated a number of flyers.  One evening, I had some cases that I had pulled the bullets from and dumped the powder from and decided to fire the primers off rather than pulling them.  I went to the cellar and when I fired the first one, I saw a long shaft of flame come out the muzzle of the 34” barrel.  Naturally I wondered what other primers would look like under the same conditions.  I primed a bunch of cases with different primers and headed for the cellar.  All the rifle primers generated a similar shaft of flame at the muzzle but large pistol primers generated a shower of sparks such as you would see if you spark tested a power grinder against metal.  I felt the shower would ignite more powder at the rear of the case than the long shaft.  I’ve been using large pistol primers in all my loads ever since.

If you think about it, ammunition manufacturers had to develop new “hotter” primers when smokeless powder came into prominence because the old “weaker” black powder primers wouldn’t consistently ignite the smokeless powder.  Another consideration is that in a cap lock rifle, the flame from the cap has to pass through a very small hole and turn ninety degrees to light the powder charge behind the projectile.  How powerful or how massive does that flame have to be if it can do that?  I think it takes a lot less fire to ignite the powder column than many of us realize.  I don’t know if the compound used in pistol primers is different from that used in rifle primers or if the amount of compound is different.  I do know that they seem to work better for me.

feather
  
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feather
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #77 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 2:55pm
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Hi Pete,

Final Installment: How Would I Do It?

Well, you asked how I would develop a load for that light bullet.  Here is what I’d do.

First I’d determine the maximum overall length of my cartridge by dropping a sized bullet into the chamber.  I’d apply a little pressure with a wooden dowel to make certain it was touching the rifling.  Then I’d measure the distance from the base of the bullet to the rear of the chamber.  I’d add the length of the bullet to that length, subtract 0.010” for clearance and that would be my maximum overall cartridge length.  I like to keep the bullets a little bit away from the rifling.

Next I would neck size the case for a distance that equals how far the bullet base would extend into the case.  I would then expand the neck using a two-step expander plug.  The leading diameter would be 0.001” smaller than the diameter of the sized bullet and the trailing diameter would be large enough to accept the rearmost driving band of the bullet.  Next I would install a Federal Large Pistol primer in the primer pocket.

At this point I would start weighing powder charges of Swiss 1-1/2 powder to determine a charge weight that when poured through a drop tube would give me a powder column that came to the base of the bullet with zero compression.  I would then pour that charge into the cases.

Finally, I would size a bullet cast from wheelweights and 2% tin into a diameter that my bore liked.  While doing that I would lubricate the bullet with a hard lubricant.  I feel that a hard lube will help maintain the groove shape against distortion during ignition and might provide better aerodynamic properties at the muzzle.  Using a seating die, I would then seat the bullet in the case against the powder.

If that load didn’t shoot well, I would then start increasing the powder charge and compression until I reached about 0.020” compression.  Should that also provide unsatisfactory results, I would then begin reducing the powder charge and begin seating the bullet farther from the rifling.  All those changes would be done in small increments.  That’s what I’d do.  You and other people might want to do something else.  I hope this helps.

feather
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #78 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 5:32pm
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feather,

   Grin Know what you mean about long posts. I've had to separate a few on here myself. Like you, I can get a little long winded as I try to explain a point that requires more than a yes or no. Sometimes I think I can hear people snoring!

Bullet Alloy

  This is interesting. Your idea of a WW plus 2% Tin alloy is something I don't believe I've seen mentioned in relation to Shilouette, and I know I've never seen it in relation to Schuetzen.

  I'm sure you're right about your conclusions as I've been a firm believer in adjusting the alloy for the MV in order not to exceed the elastic limits of the nose and cause the slumping you mention. I've just never thought of it in relation to what would happen with a shorter bullet. I'll be giving that idea a try.

  As for bullet wgt. in front or in back of center of form, I'm not an expert on this either. It's something that Dick Gunn will discuss with you at some length tho, and I think he's got some good points about it. Personally I just try to get the moulds I buy to work well. To follow the C of F idea you'd have to be ableto design your own bullets.... which is way beyond me. But, i am aware of the idea and resulting problems it can create. Your alloy idea tho might be an answer to the problem.

Volume & Compression

Been thinking that I should get some Starline brass and see how that works as I understand it has the smallest case volume. As I get it... from most to least volume it's Win., Rem., Federal, & Starline. Is that your understanding?

  I'll throw 2F & 3F powders strictly from the measure after it's set for the wgt. I want. I also check it every tenth throw to make sure things are ok. Powders like Goex have enuf fines and in the past have shown wgt. changes as you go down in the can. Swiss on the other hand has been pretty even from the top to the bottom. 1F is another story, and all charges get weighed. But even after dropping them thru a drop tube there is enuf variation in powder column hgt. that I have to make sure it's reasonably close before compressing. About .010" variation is best and anything more and I start to see unacceptable differences at the chronograph.

  Yes... I've run into this wgt. vs vol. thing with different lots of powder. The latest being Swiss 1 1/2. An old lot (bottle with no lot#) and a new lot with a lot # label showed a difference of 4 grs. between the old and the new for the same VOLUME. But, when I used the same WEIGHT, and didn't change any other setting on my dies (more compression), the MV's were the same, as were the SD/ES's and accuracy. Haven't figured that one out yet! I imagine tho that if the situation reverses with the next lot I will have to reduce the powder charge.

   I'm a great believer that a particular gun wants to be shot within a narrow MV range. Compression is important for maintaining a consistent flame front from shot to shot as it travels thru the powder charge. This also has a very short range that works well but doesn't seem to be as critical as the best MV. Actually it gets to be a balancing act to get both correct in order to get the best accuracy.

  Guess I better cut this one off to and start another message.

PETE
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #79 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 5:59pm
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feather,

Tension & Primers

  Tension is something I've just started getting into as with Schuetzen it's pretty well establiished that breech seating is the best way to go.

  In the past if I've wanted neck tension I make a spud that's the same diam. as the sized bullet. This will given about .002" neck tension. Any more and with the alloy's I use the diam. of the bullet will start gettinf reduced. Never have played around with different amounts.

  But, in working up a fixed ammo load for my .32/40 for the Election Day Challenge I was finding that the tightest neck tension I could get without deforming the bullet wasn't good enuf. On "FITZ'S" advice I tried crimping the cases and that solved the problem. Accuracy wasn't as good as I get with breech seating but was more than sufficient for offhand. It is becoming more apparent to me that the smaller tha caliber the more resistance to the burn you need in order to get a consistent burn and thus MV.

  Working with the the .40/65 now I was thinking when the 313 gr. bullet didn't work well that maybe a little neck tension would help. Bad Idea! SD/ES's improved slightly but groups went South. I haven't tried neck tension with the 417 gr. bullet since I've gotten excellent accuracy with a thumb press fit. The fit I get is such that you can push the bullet in with your thumb but you can't pull it out.

  I guess I personally never did see using magnum primers. I've always gotten excellent results with plain old large rifles. But, I will say my buddy says that they work the best in one of his rifles. So, I guess it comes down to what works for you.

  Now in Schuetzen it's pretty well established that pistol primers work the best, altho for BP shooting I'll use LR's.

  Your primer test is very interesting, and I've read of the many complaints of the old timers when primers were switched over to ignite smokeless and they couldn't get the "softer" ones for their BP loads. I can see I'm gonna have to give the LP's a try.

  To point up your experience...... I did a test once to see how far several different primers would push a 45 gr. .22 bullet up the barrel when breech seated. Some would push it as far as 5/16". Will have to dig out the results and see which pushed the least.

  Loading Ammo

  Well I can see we do things pretty well the same. My problem is that with the 313 gr. bullet I'm finding I have to not only change the powder charge but have to fiddle with compression to come up with the best accuracy. Always before I'd find that just starting out with zero compression and adding powder until best accuracy was reached was all I had to do. But then I've never tried to get a bullet not suited to the twist to work either, so was wanting to get your ideas on how to proceed as I'm not sure I was going about it right. I can see I've got some more work to do.

Hard lube

  Hmmmm..... You're going against accepted practice here aren't you? Give me some more of your thinking on this? 

PETE
  
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feather
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #80 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 8:56pm
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Hi Pete,

Perhaps I am going against accepted practice by using a hard lube.  However, what oracle decreed that only soft lubes could be used with black powder cartridges?  Let’s admit it, loading black powder cartridges after so many years of not doing it left all of us wondering where to begin.

Simplistic logic suggested that because there was fouling remaining in the barrel after each shot, we had to shoot a bullet with soft lube in order to deposit that lube in the barrel to keep the fouling soft enough to be removed by the next shot.  Since I’ve always wiped between shots, I’m not bound by that logic.  In reality, only the smallest amount of lubricant can be deposited in the barrel because the rearmost driving band of the bullet and any wads behind it will remove any surplus lube.

Is it the number of grease grooves and their depth that determines whether or not a bullet will run out of lubricant before it reaches the muzzle or the rotational velocity of the bullet?  There is a lot of linear and radial force working against the bullet at ignition.  I believe that a hard lube will have more of a tendency to stay put in the grooves of the bullet than a soft lube.  As I said in an earlier posting, it also helps prevent distortion of the driving bands because they can’t collapse into the grooves vacated by a soft lubricant.  I’m currently working with some hard lubes and black powder and initial results are promising but there is a lot more testing to do.  Remember, I’m the guy that shot paper patch bullets in silhouette matches when they said it couldn’t be done.  Either I’m simply too dumb to know any better or I’m an iconoclast.

feather
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #81 - Nov 16th, 2005 at 10:50pm
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feather,

  Iconoclast? Nah! A little weird maybe.  Grin

  You bring up some very interesting points about hard vs soft lube. If you wipe between shots then I see your point, as I do the same thing when shooting bench in Schuetzen, and there's no need for a lube to keep the fouling soft.

  What's your routine for wiping out?

  A friend pushes a bore pig thru with a cleaning rod and attaches a dry patch to follow right behind. Steve Garbe was telling me a while ago that he's trying out using a the blow tube followed by a dry patch. Claims this works real well as the bore condition doesn't change if he has to wait a shot out. Since I'm kinda new at this Shilouette shooting I'm just using the blow tube for know. I tried Steve's idea but didn't see any accuracy improvement over just using a blow tube. Of course atmospheric conditions here In Iowa are a lot different than in Wyoming. What I did find using Steve's method was that when the humidity was over 50% you didn't need to use the blow tube. Under that you did or it was about impossible to push a patch thru.

  Types of lube

  I can see your idea of using a hard lube in order to give support to the bullet. But, wouldn't a harder alloy do the same?

  I've always used a soft lube for all my shooting. Black or smokeless, and I've even used Alox/Beeswax for shooting BP with decent results. As the buddy who taught me says....."if it ain't soft it ain't lube!". I've just followed his example.

  The one thing I have found tho is that you can have to much lube on your bullet to. A .45/70 I used to have would shoot a whole lot better if I left the lube out of the top two grooves in a Lyman 457125. Most bullets I shoot anymore I leave the top groove bare. Seems to cut down on those unexpected "flyers".

  I'm not sure why a bullet runs out of lube. Not much can be being applied to the bore due to the time spent in the bore. When you fire a bullet past a chronograph it gets splattered with a lot of lube. I've even made up a "splash" shield to catch most of it.

  Question for you on this lube "application to the bore". Do you feel that the lube is applied by centrifugal force, or by the compressive force exerted by the pressure behind the bullet? I have my opinion but as another thread on here suggests one of the "Experts" says different.

  Some of my experience with soft lubes and whether they allow collapse of the grooves as vs hard lubes...... I swage cast groove bullets that are filled with SPG before doing it. Mostly to to true them up, and I haven't found the grooves collapsed to any extent I can tell. In fact truing them up will give a good 1/3rd to 1/2 reduction in group size. Granted that this might be an apple/orange situation since no lube is lost from the grooves as it's applied to the barrel on firing. But, this also brings up the idea that as a hard lube is applied to the barrel the space in the groove would collapse. So, in any event we have to use an alloy that resists deformation whether we use a hard or soft lube.

  Your thinking?

  Yeah! I remember your telling me about you using PP bullets for Shilouette shooting. Refresh my memory about that? I can get reasonable accuracy from them but never thought of them as having target quality accuracy as vs GG bullets.

PETE
  
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horsefly
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #82 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 9:27am
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Good morning, Board;

I don't want to get in the middle of this good discussion except to question two things: (1) bullet hardness [temper], and (2) lube hardness with application to the bore.

(1).  Adjusting bullet hardness to the chamber pressure has become an article of faith to a lot of folks.  That's fine.  But to me, hardness is not nearly as important as consistency.  I shoot mostly 20-1 and 30-1 in black powder cartridges, but that's because it's traditional, it works and I don't have enough life left to try everything else.  Other hardnesses work, too.  Wheel weights work - easiest with a little tin to make them flow.

If adjusting the bullet hardness were so important, why do those funny looking yellow bullets shoot so well over such a large pressure and velocity range.  It's not the pressure of the load or hardness of the bullet.  The important thing is adjusting the load components so everything works together.

(2).  The lube reply really has two parts (I'm hung up on two parts today).  The first is how lube gets onto the bore.  I have seen everything from the lube grooves squeeze it out as the bullet slumps centrifugal force.  A .45-70 bullet spins in the neighborhood of 45,000 rpm - but only when it is well down the barrel.  When it starts, the rotational velocity is zero.  Rotation increases as the bullet accelerates so centrifugal force is not strong in the first part of the bullet travel in the bore.

Another idea I have seen is that minute variations in the bore cause the bullet to expand and contract slightly as the bullet travels and causes a "pumping" action.  This one I buy the least.

Now, to the point.  I believe lube is applied by simple inertia.  As the bullet accelerates at the rate of many many times the force of gravity, the lube is forced into the bottom of the grooves by its own inertia and tries to flow between the side of the bullet and the bore.

Harder lube would be less inclined to flow, but I have no idea at what point that would make a difference.  I believe that the soft BP lubes are effective not so much because they are soft, but are soft because of their composition.  A lot of folks adjust their lube formulas bacause they think one consistence works better in one kind of weather and so forth...  Again, I won't argue the point.  I just don't adjust mine.

The point was advanced that lube application to the bore was not important because the bullet base band and the following wad cleaned the bore.  I disagree.  If you place grease on a smooth surface and try to wipe it off with one swipe of a towel, you leave some of it behind.  In fact, you can work pretty hard to wipe grease up with only towels and it will be a long time before the surface is clean.

That lube film is important.  With conventional BP lubes, the remaining film is a fat.  The BP residue is alkaline (basic).  When you add moisture with a blow tube you get ...... ready for this?....... SOAP.

That is why BP lubes are made of organic fats instead of petroleum greases.

Of course, if you clean everything from the bore for each shot, the kind of lube is not as important.  If you clean everything from the bore.........

I apologise for running overly long, but I'm feeling much better now!

Y'all be good.

horsefly
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #83 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 10:41am
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Horsefly,

  I'm glad you joined the discussion. The more viewpoints the better the chance of arriving at some conclusion that just might be right! You have some interesting points! Lets look at a few of them.

  Now all this is just my opinion, so you all can take it for what it's worth.

  Bullet hardness.

  I believe the primary purpose of hardening a bullet is to prevent the nose from slumping. Most over-the-counter moulds don't have noses that fit the bore as they should. Even if they do they will be bore riding and if the pressure being exerted is enuf to reach the nose area it will cause the nose to slump. Since there is no way to guide this slumping it will be erratic and cause various amounts of inaccuracy.

  Your point on a combination of the powder charge that gives you the best accuracy and the alloy will have to be juggled until you find a point where accuracy is best is my point exactly. This point is where pressure exerted doesn't reach the nose IMO. So, Yes! I feel bullet hardness is very important. It ranks right up there with powder charge and compression.

  Funny yellow bullets?

Lubes

  My personal opinion is that I agree with you. BUT! There is a guy in the CBA who every once in a while will make the statement that he shoots cast bullets at MV's of 2400 fps and doesn't use any lube at all. They're not PP, so......

  This is why I'd like to see more on lubes and there effect on shooting. As I mention in a previous post I've found that there is such a thing as to much lube on a bullet. An interesting article several years ago stated to much lube caused "lube purging". This got me interested in the subject. From those tests it appears this is happening as you can watch it happen on the chronograph. You will be going along getting some nice SD's and all of a sudden you'll get a MV that runs quite a bit higher. It will still be in the group, but always, the next shot will be out even tho the MV goes right back into the norm. By reducing the amount of lube on a bullet I found that I could get rid of this "flyer".

  Apparently there is a change in the condition of the bore, and it appears as tho it would have to be caused by the lube, or lube/fouling condition of the bore. At some point something builds up to where things are radically changed, or "purged".

  Your point about a bullet base, and or wad, not totally removing the lube from the barrel is well taken. This purging even happens when you wipe out between shots with BP, and when shooting smokeless.

  So, maybe feather has a point and the use of a harder lube would actually work better. However the lube is applied to the bore it would take more of it to apply a harder lube than a softer one, and would not be likely to cause as many problems when blow tubing, or wiping out between shots.

  What's your thinking on this?

PETE
  
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horsefly
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #84 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 6:55pm
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Good morning, Pete;

You mentioned that these discussions are good at helping learn something.  One thing that I keep failing to learn is how careful I need to be to keep from sticking my foot in my mouth!  As I remember, I said that I didn't think one lead hardness per se was better than another.  As you point out with nose slumping, there are limits to the hardness thing.  If the bullet is soft enough that you get uneven slumping, then it is too soft.

But let's look at slumping for a minute.  It's not all bad.  Slumping is a plastic deformation caused by a conflict between the forces of acceleration on the base of the bullet and the inertia of the lead - the tendencey of the bullet to remain at rest.  Movement of the base of the bullet is resisted by the mass of the entire bullet.  Half the way up the bullet, its movement is resisted by only half its mass.  The point being that as you move from the base of the bullet toward the nose, the tendency to slump becomes less.  Slumping is most obvious just in front of the front driving band.  It is also what cases the base of the bullet to swell and seal the bore.

{NOTE: I don't intend to insult anyone's intelligence.  Most of the readers here know exactly what I'm talking about, but I always try to write this stuff so that folks less familiar with the ideas can also know where we're going, too.}

So, I maintain that slumping is not necessarily bad.  The bad part is UNEVEN slumping.  As you rightly point out, many moulds are too small on the "bore riding" section and can slump non-uniformly.  They don't shoot worth a hoot.

If the bore riding section is very near bore diameter, the non-uniformity will be much less and other things being equal those bullets should shoot better.  The "DD" bullet moulds designed by Dr. Mann (I think) and made by NEI have a small ring around the nose to center the bullet in the bore so the bullet will slump uniformly.

So, going the long way around, I agree with you the bullet needs either to be hard enough not to have the nose slump or the bullet needs to be good enough that it will slump uniformly.

I do still believe that a 19 to 1 bullet has every chance of shooting as well as a 23.5 to 1.  there is no magic mix.

The other thing I want to pick up is purging.  I am a barefooted pilgrim on this subject.  I don't know that I have ever seen it - that may be because I just don't look for it.

Your observations over the chronograph are very interesting.  The thing that really caught my attention was this statement: "This purging even happens when you wipe out between shots with BP, and when shooting smokeless."

As I read your description, one bullet establishes the condition and the next suffers from it.  If the bore is well wiped between the shots, how is there a lube buildup to bother the next bullet?  Beats the heck out of me and I look forward to the rest of the discussion.

Let me tell a story about visiting a bullet casting and reloading operation one time.  Their product was bulk pistol bullets and reloaded pistol cartridges with their own cast bullets.

As we got to the bullet seating station, I noticed that the bullets only had the lube grooves about half full.  That is each groove had some lube and some space.  I asked the fellow about these bullets and he told me that their bulk bullet sales always were lubed with the grooves full.  Otherwise, the customer thought there was something wrong.  HOWEVER, the bullets that they loaded were only half lubed because they "shoot better".

There is a lot to learn about this lube stuff.

Y'all be good.

horsefly
  
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #85 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 7:44pm
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"....but I'm feeling much better now."



John Astin from "Night Court"! My personal hero and role model.


Glenn
  
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #86 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 10:34pm
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Is it possible that by leaving the front grease groove or grooves empty, the bullet shoots better because the bullet bumps up more, thereby filling the rifling better for a more uniform seal?
Keep on hav'n fun!
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #87 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 10:48pm
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horsefly,

  I agree with your assessment that a decently made MIGHT have better control of slumping. But, the fact that the bullet nose is bore riding means there is approx. .002 - .003" of space for the bullet to slump into. If the alloy is to soft it will slump and we both agree this will not be even. Your mention of the DD bullets brings up a point that could very well allow the bullet to slump evenly. But, for ordinary bullets without the DD ring I feel the alloy hastot be at least hard enuf that compressive force doesn't extend beyond the front driving band. If this is true then there is no way a properly sized bullet can slump since it fils the grooves completely.

  I'm going to disagree with your comment that one alloy stands as good a chance of being accurate as another. I haven't found this to be true, and it might have something to do with slumping. The .40/65 I'm working on now shoots the 417 gr. bullet best with a 1-25 alloy. When I use a 1-20 or 1-30 alloy accuracy is very noticeably poorer. The old timers were so sure of this idea that they would change their alloy by 1 point till they found the best acuracy. i.e. - 1-20, 1-21, 1-22, etc.

  Ok. Lets look at the purging thing a little deeper.

  As you say.... even if you wipe the bore out you will not get all the lube out. This also applies to the powder residue, in both black and smokeless. when we wipe between shots with BP loads we are not looking for a completely clean barrel. what we are looking for is a barrel that is consistently clean. with smokelss of course we don't wipe out at all in most cases.

  So, what we have is a slow build up of "crud" in the barrel. This is especially noticeable when using just a blow tube with bP. You can observe a slow increase in MV as the number of shots increase, AND a slow increase in the size of the group. If you go much past 15 rds. or so, you will see a sudden reduction in MV. This is the point where the next shot will be a flyer unless you have your lube under control. If you do then it's not easy to see any change in POI of that bullet. If the purging is violent enuf you'll get a flyer. With smokeless it's the same only it takes place over a longer string of shots and might not occur in a days shooting if your alloy and lube are reasonably correct.

  I would bet that most of the Schuetzen shooters on here have experienced their guns going "sour" on them during a days shooting. Most will think the barrels Leaded up, and in some cases this is true. But, if you clean the bore and don't find any Lead then your barrel has reached a point that the lube/fouling has been compressed enuf that the alloy can't purge it out. This is more prevalent with smokeless with it's harder fouling, altho under very dry conditions this point can be reached with BP to.

  This purging comes about since the bullet doesn't scrape all, or any, of the previous shots fouling. It rides up over and compresses it and the bullet is slightly reduced in diam. A point will be reached where the compressive strength of the alloy will resist this deformation enuf that it will finally "purge" most of the lube/fouling, and you start all over. Doing a decent job of wiping between shots will delay this purging indefinitely if the amount of lube you're using is right.

  As you say.... There is a lot ot learn about this lube stuff. That's why I'd like to get feathers thinking on his experiences with harder lubes. It might be a path for the rest of us to try out.

PETE
  
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PETE
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #88 - Nov 17th, 2005 at 10:57pm
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MikeT,

  I don't believe so. If your bullet is properly sized....  .001" to .002" over groove diam. ....... there shouldn't be any bump up involved. In fact, just the opposite. If the alloy is to soft and you leave lube out of the front groove, the groove is going to slump, and I think everybody agrees that ANY slumping that can't be completely controlled is not good.

  But, I dont want to rule out your idea entirely. The Lyman 457125 I mentioned up the thread a ways might prove your point. If I leave one groove empty accuracy improves over all groove filled. Leaving two grooves empty I get the best accuracy. If I leave three grooves empty accuracy goes down hill and is worse than having all grooves filled. Has a point been reached where slumping is occurring in the groove(s)? Should I go to a harder alloy and try it again?

PETE
« Last Edit: Nov 17th, 2005 at 11:03pm by »  
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MartiniBelgian
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Re: lighter weight "chicken" bullet
Reply #89 - Nov 18th, 2005 at 8:33am
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Hard lubes - I won't claim they won't work, but for me there isn't e need for them.  When a lubed bullet gets fired, there is no escape for the lube (unless the bullet is undersize), and liquids under compression just won't budge - meaning that even the soft lube will prevent lube groove collapse. If you size a lubed .458 bullet down to .451, the lube grooves will also remain intact - but not if you use an unlubed bullet though... 
Of course, if you wipe between shots, there is no need for a soft lube- but I wouldn't consider it to be a liability either.  Quite the contrary, in my thinking...

Primers - I one did an experiment with a .310 cadet:  Primed case, WW+Tin bullet which was seated on the empty case, barely a friction fit.  The rpimer was a small rifle primer.  Not only did the bullet get a good headstart, but also the heel of the (rather hard) cadet bullet got bumped up quite close to groove diameter with just primer impulse.   Now I respect that humble primer quite a bit more...
  
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