Nice video of bonding cores (thank you PDS) - similar to, but much faster than the "hillbilly" method I employed almost a decade ago, when working on a bonded-core precision bullet, for Greg Sweezey (Gold Creek Rifles) and one of his customers.
The goal was to make a bonded-core match quality bullet, which could be substituted for BIB 187 Gr. FB bullets, delivering the same point of impact, and equal group size ("cheaper tuning &practice). Both objectives were achieved. The bonded bullets and the non-bonded variety could be interchanged without concern of either
zero shift, or, precision decay. The BIB 187 FB Match were an exceptional bullet, having won IBS and NBRSA 1000 Yd. bench-rest tournaments, including National Championships, and a ten-shot record, by Joel Pendergraft, which held off the VLD type bullet for just over a decade.

So, the [FB] quest was worthy . . . and remains so today.
The process was just too slow, and, after a fair amount of testing, the bonded bullets, on moose sized animals, usually did not produce the 100% penetration - exit - which the end customer desired: the majority would be captured by the off-side hide. Further, the retained weight ran about 70-75%, while though he wanted exits, for the bullets failing to exit, the customer desired 100% weight retention: these objectives proved unobtainable. That said, from near range shots of 30- 50 yards, out to 1,100 yards, the experimental BIB .30 Cal, 187 GR. Bonded FB proved deadly.
Yes, quite excellent bonded-core jacketed bullets can be made. As wboggs stated, above, I would not shoot them at something which might bite me!


RG
Joel's 10-shot (HG) record group - BIB 187 Gr. FB.
During the quest above, another weird attempt at slowing/stopping expansion was to insert a stainless steel ball-bearing (sans the "bonding") just above the [axial] mid-point: this produced the opposite effect!

Dugh - what was supposed to hold the jacket walls together?!!?

Counter-intuitively, the ball-bearing bullets shot GREAT (groups), but the expansion was violent, and penetration limited.


At longer ranges - beyond 400 Yd. or so, the 'plain Jane' non-bonded bullets proved much more deadly than the bonded core version - the latter were better inside that range. The cartridge(s) were big: 30/378, .300 Ultra Mag., other .404Jeffery based wildcats, and the like.