243winxb's response was what I was looking for in another thread - this appears to be annealing of bullets. Just keep on asking sometimes helps, at the risk of appearing to be slow - I sure did not find what I was looking for in that thread. My attached link gives more info on annealing bullets.
I also was curious as to where lead was produced in Missouri, a region with large galena deposits. A subsequent search showed a huge lead recycling facility near Bixby Missouri complete with rail access and large capacity electrical power lines leading directly into the plant. Apparently, this plant recycles lead batteries instead of smelting operations using galena. Hopefully, lead production might be done by some wet chemical process that would reduce pollutants to acceptable levels - thus keeping the entire operation within the USA (jobs). A view of that plant's operations showed ingot forming from melted lead and mentioned mixing other metals that I would guess might be antimony.
My thoughts are that during the bullet forming operation the bullet jackets might be excessively work hardened. I am also guessing that real long pointy bullets might have more yaw than stubby bullets and a combination of yaw, huge rpms caused by fast twists, high velocities and brittle jackets might result in bullet disintegration a short distance from the muzzle. My 53 grain Hornady hp fb bullets as best as I remember were longer than the 52 Sierra bullets and were not stabilized adequately as shown by bullet profile holes at 100 when shot from a 1-14 .22-250 - that is the bullets that did not blow up.
Taking a look at 10X magnification of various sectioned pointy hollow point Berger bullets shows shallow grooves on the outside of the bullet leading to and converging at the point. Looking at the inside of a Sierra 107 grain 6.5 bullet (large void in front of core) shows a series of shallow flattened areas separated by grooves leading to the point, same for the Berger bullets. My guess is that the grooves might be deeper than seen (expansion cracks?) and could indicate areas where the jacket might fail. All this is from my casual observations as an amateur having no insider info.
The OP of the original thread apparently was shooting 142 Sierra MK's from a 6.5-.284. Another member observed a problem with 162 Amax's from a 7 RUM. Another indicated problems with 90 grain .224's. All long pointy bullets.
I think the very short transit time a bullet spends inside the barrel would prevent lead core melting. Various bullets having lead exposed at the base like the 100 grain .257 Nosler partitions I fired from .257 AI and .25-06 did not show melting when the bullets were recovered from various dead animals. I quit the .25's and now shoot 6.5's.
How dirty is dirty? Would extreme jacket fouling result in jacket failure considering the contact area of bullet and barrel is the shank of the bullet, the area having the least work hardening.
I also was curious as to where lead was produced in Missouri, a region with large galena deposits. A subsequent search showed a huge lead recycling facility near Bixby Missouri complete with rail access and large capacity electrical power lines leading directly into the plant. Apparently, this plant recycles lead batteries instead of smelting operations using galena. Hopefully, lead production might be done by some wet chemical process that would reduce pollutants to acceptable levels - thus keeping the entire operation within the USA (jobs). A view of that plant's operations showed ingot forming from melted lead and mentioned mixing other metals that I would guess might be antimony.
My thoughts are that during the bullet forming operation the bullet jackets might be excessively work hardened. I am also guessing that real long pointy bullets might have more yaw than stubby bullets and a combination of yaw, huge rpms caused by fast twists, high velocities and brittle jackets might result in bullet disintegration a short distance from the muzzle. My 53 grain Hornady hp fb bullets as best as I remember were longer than the 52 Sierra bullets and were not stabilized adequately as shown by bullet profile holes at 100 when shot from a 1-14 .22-250 - that is the bullets that did not blow up.
Taking a look at 10X magnification of various sectioned pointy hollow point Berger bullets shows shallow grooves on the outside of the bullet leading to and converging at the point. Looking at the inside of a Sierra 107 grain 6.5 bullet (large void in front of core) shows a series of shallow flattened areas separated by grooves leading to the point, same for the Berger bullets. My guess is that the grooves might be deeper than seen (expansion cracks?) and could indicate areas where the jacket might fail. All this is from my casual observations as an amateur having no insider info.
The OP of the original thread apparently was shooting 142 Sierra MK's from a 6.5-.284. Another member observed a problem with 162 Amax's from a 7 RUM. Another indicated problems with 90 grain .224's. All long pointy bullets.
I think the very short transit time a bullet spends inside the barrel would prevent lead core melting. Various bullets having lead exposed at the base like the 100 grain .257 Nosler partitions I fired from .257 AI and .25-06 did not show melting when the bullets were recovered from various dead animals. I quit the .25's and now shoot 6.5's.
How dirty is dirty? Would extreme jacket fouling result in jacket failure considering the contact area of bullet and barrel is the shank of the bullet, the area having the least work hardening.
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