Lead bullet casting.

splash

Well-Known Member
Thinking of buying a leaver action in 38-40 for pistol range .
What do I need for bullet casting ?
Obviously lead and mould . Anything else ?
 
Something to melt your lead in! The lee bottom pour pots are good for the money. Failing that a suitable pot for melting in (cast iron) on a stove and a ladle.

Before you buy a mold slug your barrel with a lead ball, you need to know your groove diameter to make sure the lead mold will produce a bullet 2 thou larger. This is really really important! An undersized bullet will lead your barrel and your accuracy will suffer.

The Lee moulds are cheap and cheerful but they do tend to be a little smaller on diameter than really required. MP moulds in Eastern Europe are very good brass moulds.

You’ll also need to apply a lube, this will depend on how fast you want to push them and if you’re using smokeless or black powder. The simplest method is to tumble lube them with Lee liquid Alox. If you want to go faster and seat gas checks the rcbs/ Lyman 450 lube sizer with a suitable diameter die would help. If you’re using black powder you’ll need a black powder friendly lube that doesn’t contain petroleum constituents, beeswax and olive is a simple lube BP lube.

It’s worth spending some time on the cast boolits forum. It can be frustrating at times with wrinkled bullets and poor fillout as your learn the ropes but once you’ve got the knack you can churn good quality bullets out at a high rate and with little cost.
 
I’m used to reloading normal stuff from .17 fireball to 28g shotgun .
But casting lead bullets is a new venture. Don’t need fast speed only for range fun, thinking about either a Winchester 1873 or 1892 20” barrel
Will look a cast bootlids
 
38-40 will be a PITA as you'll pretty much need to size them yourself which will me a sizing set up in addition to your casting set up. So even secondhand you are looking at having to cast near a thousand bullets to cover the cost of your lubrisizer, lube die and top punch.
 
Personally I would go for the Lee casting pot as it becomes a lot easier on the long run if you are planning on casting loads. Also lead coming from the bottom is usually a lot cleaner minus the impurities that seem to float to the surface. Good quality lead with the right characteristics is important as opposed to some which has either too much tin or alloys. Lee moulds does the job but do follow the instructions to get it conditioned properly. Also you may need a flux, beeswax is what I use, but even candle wax should do the trick. I use a metal tray with an old towel to catch the moulded lead balls/ bullets to enable them to cool and do quality control before I decide on what to keep. Also do have a set of fire mans gloves for emergencies, just to be on the safe side along with a pair of goggles. Somewhere outdoors is preferable unless you have good ventilation as you wouldn't want to breathe in the smoke created when you add the flux. For the first time I woud suggest taking it slow on a sunny day with no kids or pets running around as when dealing with molten lead, you need to stay focused. Also there are a lot of youtube videos to help and do PM me if I can be of further help as I am fairly self taught and have learnt from my own mistakes over time. All the best.
 
We used to cast lead when we were kids ! So know what happens with molten lead and a damp baking tray 😂 was in a mates kitchen on the gas stove !
Trying to get lead off your face and tea shirt was nothing compared to his mum’s kitchen and curtains.
He got a right pasting 😂😂😂😂
 
To size or not to size that is the question. Slugging your bore is a must, conventional wisdom is to have your bullets .001" over grove diameter. Depending on your alloy and mould your cast bullets will vary in size. Some say don't size if you don't need to, it's a bit of trial and error. Powder choice is a key question, if you go down the black powder route you want your bullets on the softer side. It seems counter intuitive but leading is actually caused by gas cutting where gas is escaping past the bullet base. With black powder the base will get a good thump as it starts it's travel and a soft bullet ensures that the base seals the bore preventing leading. Lee do a simple push sizer and you can order custom sizes if need be, certainly a lot cheaper than investing in a lubrisizer if you're just starting out.
 
.38-40 anecdotally is I will advise a hugely frustrating cartridge to reload for and you WILL need to size every bullet IMHO. The reason is that it is a bottleneck cartridge of an inbuilt problem for the reloader (it is very thin) that if not reloaded with care will give you collapsed shoulders. Therefore you need to have a physical "feel" when the bullet is being seated to know if you are applying too much upward force as the bullet is seated. AND also when then applying the crimp. To help you get a sense for that you must have all the bullets of consistent diameter. My own advice is don't buy a .38-40. If you must go down the xx-40 route buy a .44-40 it is more forgiving to reload and also you can buy ready cast GM Bullets bullets.
 
As above.
Never melt lead in a confined space. Out in the garden. Go slow. Do not try and do it in shorts and flip-flops - because that smarts: I had a "friend" who did that...

Any lead that has moisture in it when melted with not 'pop', it will go off like a fing Mills Grenade.

I now used full PPE (topical) with a leather apron, welders gloves, full-face guard. I also have a bucket of water nearby (dunking any bits of burning skin) and a foam fire extinguisher to hand. Yeah - melting lead, what could possibly go wrong.

If you have an egg and a Grandma this bit is for you - lead is also highly toxic. In the olden days, hatters used lead in the construction of their wares: hence the "Mad Hatter" in Alice in Wonderland: so the danger is not confined to the hot aspect but there is also a risk of insanity in simply handling the raw materials.

Any hoo, you enjoy yourself...
 

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.38-40 anecdotally is I will advise a hugely frustrating cartridge to reload for and you WILL need to size every bullet IMHO. The reason is that it is a bottleneck cartridge of an inbuilt problem for the reloader (it is very thin) that if not reloaded with care will give you collapsed shoulders. Therefore you need to have a physical "feel" when the bullet is being seated to know if you are applying too much upward force as the bullet is seated. AND also when then applying the crimp. To help you get a sense for that you must have all the bullets of consistent diameter. My own advice is don't buy a .38-40. If you must go down the xx-40 route buy a .44-40 it is more forgiving to reload and also you can buy ready cast GM Bullets bullets.
Could go 44-40 just looking for a smooth shooting gallery rifle to use on club pistol range .
 
I've owned a .44-40, although it was in a Colt New Service revolver and that with care wasn't too fraught to load. But do remember that your dies will be steel and you will need to crimp in a separate process from seating unlike much stronger bottleneck rifle cases.
 
As a regular caster I would suggest the following:
Bottom pour lead pot (RCBS is the best but is expensive, Lee drip o matic not recommended)
Source of lead (indoor pistol calibre range is good, plus a source of pure lead scrasp)
Lubesizer (Star or RCBS again and sizing dies .002" over the bore diameter)
Boolit lube ( lots to choose from on ebay)
M die for you resized cartridge cases.
That should start you off!
 
I forgot to say that I consider that NOE boolit moulds are the Rolls Royce of moulds
Lee are the Ford Anglia!
 
Thread hijack, didn't Vivian in the Young Ones have a Ford Anglia? Maybe this emphasizes Dodgyrog's point. I've have a .43" Spanish mould from Old West Moulds and am quite impressed with it. They do the weird & wonderful, if you need a 17.8mm for your Tabatiere they do it. He does a variety of pistol moulds including .44-40. They are based in the USA though.
 
Could go 44-40 just looking for a smooth shooting gallery rifle to use on club pistol range .
Purely out of curiosity why are you considering a .38-40 or .44-40 rather than one of the more modern calibres such as .44 mag or .45LC?
Components and dies being far more available for the modern chamberings.
 
I’m thinking of buying an original 1873 or 1892 Winchester. Fancy something that’s different .
Don’t think I’ll need to cast now found a uk company shellhouse bullet company that make and sell bullets for both calibers .
Any one used them ?
 
As above.
Never melt lead in a confined space. Out in the garden. Go slow. Do not try and do it in shorts and flip-flops - because that smarts: I had a "friend" who did that...

Any lead that has moisture in it when melted with not 'pop', it will go off like a fing Mills Grenade.

I now used full PPE (topical) with a leather apron, welders gloves, full-face guard. I also have a bucket of water nearby (dunking any bits of burning skin) and a foam fire extinguisher to hand. Yeah - melting lead, what could possibly go wrong.

If you have an egg and a Grandma this bit is for you - lead is also highly toxic. In the olden days, hatters used lead in the construction of their wares: hence the "Mad Hatter" in Alice in Wonderland: so the danger is not confined to the hot aspect but there is also a risk of insanity in simply handling the raw materials.

Any hoo, you enjoy yourself...
Mercury.
 
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