Finally committed to casting Boolits!!!
Well, I've lurked on this forum and others and pondered for years about casting my own boolits. I've even purchased good cast bullets and done well with them in my .348, having shot hundreds at good hunting velocities almost matching jacketed loads. I think I've done the homework, now it's time to bite the boolit. :castmine:
I could buy the best and most modern of equipment, but that's not what I want. What I do want, is to cast in the simplest manner possible while still getting the job done. Sort of a "getting back to the basics" type of bullet casting and then hunting with them. Time is not a consideration, and I actually would like to prolong the hobby time.
Initially I want to cast 200+ grain .358 dia. boolits for the .35 Remington in a Marlin rifle that has Micro-Groove rifling. My understanding is that I should produce a casting that exceeds groove dia. by .002 to get the best out of this barrel. I also want to shoot at hunting velocities up to 2200 fps. while maintaining reasonable accuracy. Those are my goals. I'm a hunter primarily, and less of a target-shooter but successful casting would inspire me to do better. I don't expect to be cranking out great numbers, but I do want to make a good boolit, and would be pleased with a 1" grouping at 50 yards.
My thinking at this time is that I will not need to size, and will try to tumble lube only. Gas checks would be installed on a Lee push sizer kit, and I'm expecting I will be honing out the sizer die to maintain the larger dimension dropped by my RCBS 200-358 FNGC mold.
Questions that come to mind at this point are:
How far can I go with Lee Liquid Alox in respect to velocities? Is there a better tumble lube?
Is there a direct correlation between bullet hardness (Lyman #2) and velocity before accuracy falls off?
Am I being realistic in my goals of working with basic equipment, or should I just go ahead and purchase the best? :confused:
Give it to me straight guys, and I do appreciate it.
BrushBuster