LeeLoader and Tumble lube bullet project

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tturner53 posted this 03 August 2009

Finally got started on my 'cheap and simple' project, although you could say it started a long time ago.The goal is to see if I can produce decent ammo with only the basics, a Lee Loader and a Tumble Lube bullet mold. These are very inexpensive to buy and easily available to a beginner. The lead is wheel wieghts and the brass is range pickups. That means you have to buy lube(Lee Liquid Alox is about $4.50), powder and primers.Yesterday I started with .45 acp and 9mm Luger. The .45 went well and the ammo fed and ejected in my 1911, no shooting yet. Ran into a problem with the 9. Lee's instructions say you need to check the brass first to make sure it will fit in your gun before you process it, they're not kidding. I think the 9mm brass I got was used in a sub gun and was expanded a lot. The Lee kit would not size it down enough to chamber in my Tanfoglio TA90. I'm going to dig around and find some empties that were already fired in that gun and go from there. So, first lesson learned, you cannot necessarily reload any old fired brass in a 9mm. That may have something to do with the much higher working pressure of the 9mm compared to the .45acp.. My plan is to also include the .38 Special in this experiment. If anybody wants to share their 'cheap and simple' story here that's  great. If there's any interest I'll post results as I go along. I know there's way better tools for the job, but this is about the cheapest setup I know of and that's the main point. Once I have 50 rounds loaded up for all three, 9mm, .45acp, .38 Sp., I'm off to the range.   EDIT: I'll throw in a little background info here, the guns for this project are the 9mm Tanfoglio(which I have won  matches with a long time ago), a S&W Model 19 6” barrel, and a Charles Daly 1911(my Colt was stolen and my other 1911 is really a rattle trap!). The bullet molds are all Lee tumble lube designs, probably about $20 each new, the TL356-124-SWC(I'd call it a truncated cone); the .452 200 gr. SWC; and the .358 150 gr. SWC. All are double cavity. On the boxes it says “Made for tumble lubing without sizing". I used a lyman dipper in an old cast iron pot on a Coleman stove.

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Vacek posted this 03 August 2009

I started years ago with the little Lee lead pot ($2 at the time), the Lee Dipper, and a mold all for my 303 Brit that I loaded with a Lee Loader. Worked fine.

For grins I loaded up a few 9mm with a Lee Loader last month. After a little tweaking they worked fine.

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CB posted this 03 August 2009

tturner

I won't do my usual thing and comment before most of the info is in. Your's is an interesting Thread I want hear the rest from you and the others . I'll be reading out of interest only.

Stephen Perry

Angeles BR:fire

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tturner53 posted this 04 August 2009

I was hoping this might stir some old memories. Vacek, like you and probably most of us I started with a Lee Loader. Thinking back it's lucky I didn't hurt myself as I was not cautious in those days! I'd like to hear more about those 9mms you loaded up. Any problems sizing? A few things came up in my project right away, and I'm still in the loading phase, haven't fired a shot yet. The need for a caliper is big, a serious safety item. I think a beginner could get a $20 set and be fine for quite a while. I have an old plastic Lyman(25 yrs. old) says “Swiss Made” that still work good enough. Another handy but cheap accessorry is a case mouth chamfering tool to reduce lead shaving of the TL bullets. Those can be had for peanuts. So I'm sticking to the CHEAP and SIMPLE theme so far, tomorrow I load the .38s and maybe Weds. go to the range. I'll give you the load data with the shooting results. Stephen, I'm glad I caught your interest. I know you started somewhere before you became a serious BR guy. Remember, this project is primarily about having fun on the cheap. How'd you get started reloading?   EDIT; A note to any beginners; the caliper is a safety item because many published loads give a minimum overall length. Going below that increases pressure.

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Vacek posted this 04 August 2009

Trying to remember.
(1) I deprimed and sized the case with the Lee Loader.
(2) At this point I check the case with a Wilson case gauge. (3) I used the chamfer tool and an old lee loader case expander. (4) I primed with the Lee (red color) prime tool. This came with the old style Lee Loaders from the Mequon era.
(4) Next I used a .3 cc dipper and W231 (a light load). (5) I seat the bullet (a 125-356 FNTL) which had been sized with the old whackamo Lee Bullet Sizers. I worked the depth until it seated right into the Wilson Gage. (6) I disassembled my Glock 17 to make sure it seat easily into the barrel.

A fun exercise Took some time, but it works. I did experiment a little with the crimp but in the end it was more an exercise of right seating depth.

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tturner53 posted this 04 August 2009

The biggest problem I had loading the 9mm was sizing the cases. After I dig out some old brass that was already fired in my gun it was easy. I also have a Loader that has that little red priming tool, it's pretty handy. Hopefully will be able to shoot it all up tomorrow, see how it does.

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tturner53 posted this 05 August 2009

Been doing some reading, raising some questions in my head. Anybody here know the history behind the tumble lube bullet?

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CB posted this 05 August 2009

t

As far as I can tell the Lee Loader works for every rifle, pistol and shotgun ammo they say it does. Lee is an engineer and so are his designers. Engineers can generally make anything work and he does it simple and makes a profit. That's what I do on my road jobs.

I have 1 Lee Loader in .222 Rem not the target set but I have everything the target set has in Wilson except the inside neck reamer which have no use for such, I outside neck turn.

The Lee works unless the neck brass is too large to fit in the die. To fix this a one time neck turn allows you to fit the neck to the die not bad here. This is basic loading best done with a caliper to be sure you are right. Like I said with any Lee Loader for rifle loading set your cases up right and forget it.

Pistol cases I don't know in a Lee just reading along I do all my pistol now on a Star. Shotgun I do on my Mec and Lyman Grand American.

Stephen Perry

Angeles BR:fire

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tturner53 posted this 06 August 2009

Test fired the Lee Loader ammo yesterday. The .45 worked perfectly, no malfunctions. 14 shot group at 25 yds. was 4 1/2” with a light charge of 231. Almost no leading. The 9mm started out good, a few x's, then opened up to 6” and two keyholes. 25 yds. also. Barrel is not too bad, but there were 3 failures to feed. Powder was light charge of SR4756, because I have a ton of it. The .38 loads all were 3gr. Bullseye. The 150 Tumble Lube went 2 1/2 ” at 25 yds. On the advice of Duane I tried a regular bullet, but unsized and tumble lubed. Actually two bullets. An old Lee mold, 358-140-SWC, a plain base design, went .360” as cast and fired, did 12 shots into 3". I also busted out an old Ideal wadcutter, #358-432, 159 grs., also .360 as cast and fired. It printed 2 1/4” groups at 25 yds. All shots were off sandbags. I didn't size the .38 cases  since the bullets were oversize anyway, just crimped 'em in with the Lee Loader die body. They were loaded into a full cylinder,(no single loading) and all the bullets held their place under recoil no problem. That cut the time down to 1 minute per round to load on the .38. If there's any point it's that a guy starting out with less than a $100 could load good useable ammo for about 5-6 cents each if he tried. It also shows that the 9mm is a little harder to get good results from with cast bullets but can be done as other posts here indicate. I think Duane's point from a while back that tumble lube handgun molds aren't really an advantage is correct. For about $20 you can get a Lee conventional mold, tumble lube those as cast and use 'em just like a tumble lube bullet, but then when you get a sizer and press you still have a useful mold.   Edit; I have read that Veral Smith designed the first tumble lube bullets over 30 yrs. ago then changed the design because he didn't think they were any good. I think he offers something similar for tumble lubing, if I have my facts straight.

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canalupo posted this 06 August 2009

TT

used a lee loader in .357 for years.

Use a BBQ propane tank, a plumber's pot and a weed burner torch for heating lead. Made a “stove stand” out of a piece of 6 inch stove pipe. I have a piece of expanded metal on top of pipe to rest pot on when heating. I stick the torch in a hole in bottom side of pipe.

That is my fancy set up. Your problem with range brass may be it was fired from a glock and has the infamous “glock Bulge". The newer pass thru dies will reduce bulge to make brass usable but that could be a dangerous way to go with full power loads.

Good luck

Bob D

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tturner53 posted this 06 August 2009

Bob, thanks for the input. For some reason that setup of yours makes me think of a space shuttle launch! What bullet do you use for your .357? The brass I tried at first in my 9 was stuff I have tons of, it was fired in a fully suppressed Uzi that belonged to Uncle Sam. I'm done with cast in my 9mm, too much time to make it work. The .45 is another matter.

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canalupo posted this 07 August 2009

TT I have been playing with a Lee TL .358 158gr  swc and Lee tumble lube right from mold without sizing. I had a little trouble with my alloy.  I was using ww mixed with dental X-Ray films shields. I believe there was not enough lead in mix so I added solder.  I changed to WW mixed with some 95/5 plumbers solder. Duane Mellenbuch (hope I spelled that right Duane) helped me out with a lot of good info on tumble lube bullets and alloys. I haven't had a chance to do any serious testing with the new alloy but I hope to get to it in the next few weeks.

I have been shooting TL ,356 125 truncated cone nose in my beretta 92, 4 grs of w231 and having some success. I need to tweak the powder a little. So much to do so little time.

I am currently waiting for a mold for .45 auto, TL .452 200 gr swc. Hopefully I will get it soon. I will keep you up to date on any progress.

Thanks Bob D

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bruce posted this 14 December 2009

I started handloading in 2004 with a Lee Loader in .38/.357 mag. The first thing I ditched was the priming gadget - I think I developed a flinch tapping the case down onto a primer - since they would go off from time to time.

I ended up getting the Lee press that you hold in your hands, it is essentially a single stage press with no mounting base. I love that thing. It opens up the whole world of “real” dies, and I load a variety of different calibers with it, not particularly fast but way faster than with a Lee loader. I do almost all my powder measuring with the Lee Dipper set, although I do have a scale and one of the micrometer-style measures. Dipping works well for me.

On the whole speed issue, I tend to shoot to empty the brass, so if I load slow and shoot slow I get more hobby for my money.

I like loading .45 Colt because everything is nice and fat and it feels like writing with the fat pencils you get in the first grade. Then I like .22 hornet and .32(ACP, S&W Long) because it is fun to fiddle around with little things sometimes. So far the only bullets I've cast have been .32 and .45, Lee dies of course, sticking with my general tight wad approach. I'm a big fan of Bullseye for the exact same reason. Cheap and simple.

I like the Tumble lube bullet idea. In the interest of really going further low tech, I keep thinking I should get myself a percussion revolver, a round ball mold and figure out how to make percussion caps out of something or another.

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bruce posted this 14 December 2009

Well, I guess it is the Forster Tap-0-Cap for me! http://www.forsterproducts.com/catalog.asp?prodid=627421&showprevnext=1>http://www.forsterproducts.com/catalog.asp?prodid=627421&showprevnext=1

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tturner53 posted this 14 December 2009

I'll be expecting a report on that Tap o Cap. Did you get a percussion revolver?

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bruce posted this 14 December 2009

I just found the link today. I emailed it to my wife as a would-be christmas gift idea.

Don't have a revolver yet. Any suggestions?

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raytear posted this 14 December 2009

It has been a long time since I shot a repro of either the Remington or Colt percussion revolvers and have never owned one. It always seemed to me that the Remington was the stronger design, what with the top strap. The Remington front sight seemed to work better for me than that little brass cone on the Colt.

If I remember correctly, The Outlaw Josie Wales shot Remington pattern revolvers and seemed to have an easy time swapping empty cylinders for loaded ones while keeping his eyes on the bad guys. :fire

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tturner53 posted this 15 December 2009

Years ago I had a Colt repro, Italian '51 Navy if I remember right. It had a brass frame. It's been a while, but I think it was a .36. (Remember I have CRS). It was fun, that's all I remember. Now I have a brace of Ruger Old Armies, .44s. that will go in my coffin with me. I got them both way back, used, before they got so pricey. If I remember right(again, CRS), Ed Harris said the Ruger OA was the most accurate revolver he's ever shot. I know mine shoot better than I do, either with a round ball or conical. I only use black powder. So I guess it depends on what you want from a gun. They're all very fun to shoot and can be deadly as hell. There's really nothing else like shooting a percussion revolver. If I had the bucks I'd get a real Colt. Back in my mountain man days I took the Rugers in the backcountry for protection. When you cock the Ruger it sounds like a bank vault latch opening, very satisfying.

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bruce posted this 15 December 2009

I just ordered this from Cabela's:

http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/pod/horizontal-pod.jsp?id=0006186&navCount=2&parentId=cat370001&masterpathid=&navAction=push&cmCat=MainCatcat21404-cat21420-cat370001&parentType=index&indexId=cat370001&rid=>http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/templates/pod/horizontal-pod.jsp?id=0006186&navCount=2&parentId=cat370001&masterpathid=&navAction=push&cmCat=MainCatcat21404-cat21420-cat370001&parentType=index&indexId=cat370001&rid=

Their italian brass-framed Confederate Navy 1851 in 44. I discovered the $119 price and bought it. Living in Michigan, I have to fax in a notorized paper saying that I've never been imprisoned for over four years, so that means I need to get to the bank before they will ship the gun. Am I going to be sorry for not getting a steel frame? I think right now $189 is their cheapest steel gun.

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tturner53 posted this 15 December 2009

Sorry? I doubt it. Thousands of brass frame guns were used in combat, they can't be too bad. I doubt you could shoot it loose unless you tried. Just stick to normal loads. 20 gr. FFF with a .451 round ball is Sam Fadala's idea of an optimum load. I looked at some of the reviews on Cabela's site, it sounds like some happy customers. Once you get the black powder bug you will want more guns. Maybe try to pick up a copy of some old black powder manuals by Fadala or Lyman. Lots of little tricks to these guns to enjoy them more. Have fun Bruce.

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bruce posted this 15 December 2009

Now, would it be a good idea for me to un-hijack this thread? It seems like I should move over to blackpowder. I asked about the tap-0-cap over there, and haven't got too much interest.

Wait until I ask about making black powder from scratch!

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jhrosier posted this 15 December 2009

You can bury me with my Lee loader, because I'll never use it in this life.:(

I tried a Lee loader in .38 S&W once. It took forever to load a box of cartridges and I pretty much gave up on the idea.

I would use the Lee hand press with a set of regular dies though.

Jack

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Tazman1602 posted this 20 December 2009

TT I don't know if this applies to your situation at all but I LIKE the experiment and I haven't heard anyone mention this yet.

I just got done reading Richard Lee's updated guide to reloading and the part about the Lee loader. That loader was designed to neck size only -- I KNOW that pertains to bottleneck rifle shells but Lee was pretty insistent that you should only use the Lee Loader for cases that had been previously shot from THAT particular gun.

Maybe you could try full length sizing/trimming some cases, putting a mild load in them to fire form them, THEN try using the Lee loader?

Just trying to give you some help, I used a Lee loader for years for a .44 mag but at the time it was the ONLY gun I had so I had no worries about cases fired from other guns because those two babies wanted diapers and food...........and a lot of food too!

Let me know how the experiment works out, maybe I'll have to dig out my Lee loader, KRAP!................don't have a .44 mag anymore but still have the loader.....

Regards,

Art

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tturner53 posted this 20 December 2009

Taz, now you have a good excuse to get another gun. Everybody needs at least one .44 of some kind. I used to have a S&W 624 with 4” barrel, man I regret trading that off. I did get a real nice motorcycle for it though, but that's gone too. The 9mm seems to be more picky than any thing else I've used the Lee Loaders for. I have collected them for years and have a bunch. Every once in a while I'll use one for a 'quickie' or back up when I screw up my regular dies. I do use the Lee hand press a lot. I also use the 310 tool for several calibers, mostly just for fun of it. I have collected those too and am still figuring out what some of the dies are. I need to find a good tutorial on the 310. Some of the dies look like bullet sizing dies to me, don't know what else they'd be, but have no idea how to use them. Finally, I've read about reloading without any dies at all! Something about a home made decapper, drilling a hole in wood and using that to neck size!

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Tazman1602 posted this 20 December 2009

HEHEHE. Got a Taurus .44 Special with the bobbed hammer, just love that gun. Never really did like .44 Mag, don't know why just never had any use for that dang hand cannon. Mine was a Ruger Redhawk 7.5” barrel and it was a heckva shooter but it wieghed about as much as some of my rifles. NEVER should have gotten rid of it as it was a NICE piece. That Lee Loader? An old guy I work with got me that, a 240gr .44 Lee mold, and an old Lee casting pot he had for Christmas one year because he got tired of me complaining how much that .44 cost to shoot back then.

...........little did I know that over 30 years of reloading how the stuff would multiply. Yard sales, estate sales, a little here, one piece there. Too bad it's such a liability to reload/sell ammo with all the licenses because I could make a fortune up here right now....

Art

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bruce posted this 21 December 2009

And indeed the 1851 Colt replica showed up. It is a lovely thing. It seems to have great lockup. The cylinder to forcing cone gap is small enough that I can't even see light, but there is no dragging. I'm chomping at the bit to fire it, but probably won't get to until the second week of January. By then, my Tap-O-cap will have arrived as well. I'm going to get some real store-bought caps to start with, though, and probably by a few round balls before I can get started casting them.

In the quest for simplicity, isn't the next stop a flintlock?

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tturner53 posted this 21 December 2009

Congratulations on your new gun. I'd like to see a picture if you can(I haven't figured that out myself). Looking forward to test results with the Colt and the Tap o Cap.  EDIT; yes, the flintlock is next, and then smoothbore muskets. One of my favorite guns is a percussion single barrel 12 ga. Light as a feather. Have fun.

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tturner53 posted this 27 June 2010

I'm expanding this project to 'cheap, simple, AND lazy'. After about 30 yrs. handloading and casting I have accumulated the usual equipment, but still like the basic stuff to play with. This will sound like a Lee commercial, but it's not. Last night I loaded a box of .357 magnums in my recliner. Now that's lazy. The mold I used was an LBT and the priming tool was a very old RCBS 'Posi Prime'. The dies are RCBS carbide. I tumble lubed the gas checked bullets then sized them with a Lee push thru .358 in a Lee hand press, sitting in my chair. Sized, deprimed, belled, and reprimed them in my chair. Lee dipper for powder charging and seating the bullets all with my feet up! Now if I could just shoot them from my chair...This load, OAL 1.595", feeds and shoots well from my Marlin 1894c. Oh, 10.2 gr. of AA#9 and Federal 100 SP primers. It's ridiculous, but have yet to shoot a piece of paper with it, just silhouettes, which it did very well at, almost can't miss with this combo it seems. The LBT mold was from one of Jeff's group buys and it's a beautiful mold and bullet, probably the reason for the great accuracy. They will chamber in the Marlin unsized, .360", and have shot well too that way. The reason I sized this batch was to also try them in my old Ruger 3 screw .357, the .360 won't chamber in it without a fight. If it cools off a little (100 plus today) I'll slap a scope on the Marlin and really see what's up. Maybe even break out my three year old Chrony which is still unused. I did say I was lazy, right? And simple, and cheap. Bought a BSA 36X fixed, $60, might put that on the Marlin.

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biddulph posted this 06 July 2010

Hi guys, I know this is an old thread but it's most interesting.

I started reloading with a Lee Loader which cost $50 Australian. Things always cost more in this distant corner of the earth...

I was loading for my .303. The best groups I had got with factory ammo were 4” at 1oo yards. With my first attempt with the lee loader I got 2” groups. My best ever with this tool was 3 shots into 1". I think luck had a bit to do with it.

The Lee Loader is one of the most elegant pieces of design I have come across. I'd love it if Richard Lee could write a book about the design and history of this bit of gear.

I took my lee loader out camping last month with my dad and loaded a few up for him. He was amazed that so much could be accomplished with such a simple little device.

the only other tool I used with the Lee loader was an electronic caliper to check OAL but this is not really needed if one follows Lee's advice and uses a factory round to set up the loader re OAL.

I use lots of other loading gear now but still enjoy resizing cases with the Lee Loader, utilising a nice dense hard piece of dessert timber as a hammer. Most therapuetic.

I think it may be fun to set up a separate thread on our collective experiences of the Lee Loader as its something special in terms of reloading gear.

I have heard and read all sorts of criticism re this tool, especially the 'dangers' of belting in primers with a hammer. I have had a couple of primers go 'bang' whilst doing this but it appears to be most safe as the whole case is surrounded by steel and the priming rod is sheltering the user from the primer. Glasses on whilst reloading also ensures against injury but I dont think any thing could get out given the above apart from some sparks and noise.

cheers

James

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noylj posted this 22 July 2011

For tumble lube, go to White Label Lube and buy Xlox (their version of LLA for less money)

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Vacek posted this 15 September 2011

An old post that I am going to come back to.  In urner's initial post his problem was 9mm that needed full resize.  I picked up an Ideal Whak a Mo full length die on Ebay for grins.  It does  perfect job resizing the 9mm.  Actually I now have >40 different Ideal dies of this type.  Once you start collecting its kinda hard to stop.  These dies were around in the olden days complementary to the tong tool when it was necessary to full resize brass.

Retro, but they work very well.

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51colt posted this 15 January 2012

I know this is an old post the lee loaders in 9mm, 45acp, 38acp and 30 carbine do full length size the case all the other lee loaders only neck size. 51

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Ed Harris posted this 15 January 2012

tturner53 wrote: Been doing some reading, raising some questions in my head. Anybody here know the history behind the tumble lube bullet?

NRA contributing Editor Dennis Marshall and I worked jointly with Richard Lee in evaluating and proving Lee's concept in the early 1980s. Early trials were in 9mm Luger in a Browning Highpower because we could clean the barrel, weigh it on a sensitive laboratory balance, fire it and weigh the fouling deposited in the barrel as a function of rounds fired, to compare lubes.

73 de KE4SKY In Home Mix We Trust From the Home of Ed's Red in "Almost Heaven" West Virginia

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tturner53 posted this 16 January 2012

So how did the tests come out? I guess it was good because Lee has really run with the ball and I notice you use a lot of tumble lubed bullets as cast. That's how I lube about 90% of my bullets. Now Ranch Dog Outdoors has gone to the next level with micro bands and tumble lubing, taking some rifle bullets to well over 2,000 fps for hunting. Per Ranch Dog methods I'm experimenting with dipping instead of tumbling, little slower but neater.

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Ed Harris posted this 16 January 2012

Stick to light loads, 20-grains with a roundball in a .44 or 12 grains in a .36 and your brass frame cap & ball revolver will be OK.

Some of the Italian repros have “bottle-shaped” chambers to preclude your putting too much powder in, but the steel framed guns often have straight-walled chambers which will hold up to 30 grains of blackpowder with a roundball in .44 or 20 grains in a .36 caliber.

If your chambers will hold that much powder, think of it as being similar to shooting .38 Special +P in an alloy frame. If you do so, you will shoot the gun loose in a few hundred rounds.

73 de KE4SKY In Home Mix We Trust From the Home of Ed's Red in "Almost Heaven" West Virginia

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51colt posted this 16 January 2012

I shoot cap and ball revolvers a lot. One thing to keep in mind is black powder measures are all over the place. Weighing black powder will drive you crazy it will have deterrent weights from batch to batch or from one brand to another. For a 20gr load i use a 38sp case. My starting load for a 36cal i use 30 carbine case. You can adjust from there. your gun is going to tell you what it likes. 51

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