Dusty Stevens
Shiner
Be sure they have a cannelure too, just to be sure they are of the best quality
Well, hurry up and try it already!
So to be clear, I am NOT making the bullets, I'm just modifying them...slightly.The open base fmj bullets will need a "gas check" hard swaged to the fmj bullets base.
Base must be square & uniform to be accurate.
The completed bullets should go in a finish die.
http://www.corbins.com/
You won’t have to walk far for what should be your first test. A good stiff backer at 10-20 yards will show if the bullet is coming apart in the barrel as many speculate.I would if I didn't mind walking in mud and shooting in the rain!
Is that because you've done this experiment or...?What you are doing is making poor bullets worse
Well, I'm a distant cousin of Goldilocks and everything's gotta be juuuust riiiight!Mud?? Rain??? Whats this stuff you speak of??
YEP! So many folks just parrot the "gospel" of something and take it for it's word. I on the other hand, while not from Missouri, I say show me!!Darnn the torpedoes and go ahead with your plan.
What you propose is counter-intuitive and seems dumb. However, I have seen worse ideas proven outstanding in their application. Made one of my favorite statements, "don't tell me it can't be done."
I'm in the naysayers camp, that it will significant worsen accuracy, and would *love* to be proven wrong.
Please post your "test" results.
Hmm...wish you had posted earlier. I made rounds with the typical powder and charge I use.You won’t have to walk far for what should be your first test. A good stiff backer at 10-20 yards will show if the bullet is coming apart in the barrel as many speculate.
In the days before specialty sub sonic rifle bullets, many bullets were shot backwards and held up just fine. I can’t remember specifically shooting an open base FMJ, but wouldn’t rule it out.
Many loads were high pressure/low velocity as they made the quietest loads.
I have spent many hours doing what everyone else said could not be done. It’s often the initial pressure and acceleration that causes bullet failure in the barrel. You can control that with powder choice.
You can always start low around 14-1500 fps and work up to bullet failure. Plenty of pure lead bullets go down range without liquefying.
Lots to be learned if you think it through.
And followed by....." Hold my beer and watch this " !!"don't tell me it can't be done."
YEP!!! That's me!!!And followed by....." Hold my beer and watch this " !!
And hollered by the survivors, "whoop! That was fun -- let's do it again!!"And followed by....." Hold my beer and watch this " !!
Why would the core temp change enough to liquify by opening the tip?I dont think the bullet will come apart in the barrel. Lead cores liquify inside jackets going down range (according to rpm and if the jacket is bonded or the lead oxidized, etc) so im saying it will liquify and just run out the back as its going down range. May take 50yds or it may happen at 200 who knows. A fmj has the thick copper in the front and is balanced that way, while a HP bullet has the copper in the base. Some point their bullets and close up this hole some. Its not really changing the balance just the aerodynamics and the shape of the pressure wave.
Yeah, I shoulda dun it that way or I could just lie and claim my experiment works.