This is not exactly a precision shooting question but maybe someone can give me some pointers. In the past, the only bullets I ever cast were .45 cal round balls for my Old Army. I have a simple 400 W Palmer electric pot (not bottom pour), dipper, aluminum Lee molds and about 50 lbs of old wheel weights and salvaged bullets. While the balls for the Old Army should be pure lead, it is actually very forgiving regarding the alloy used. So, I've never made much of a science of casting. I use candle wax for fluxing and couldn't tell you exactly what alloy is in the pot but it's mostly wheel weights. I do have an old Lyman Cast Bullet Handbook.
I decided I needed to do more with that ~50 lbs of lead, so I bought a mold for 125 gn 9 mm RN pistol bullets and some liquid bullet lube. So far, I've cast about 100. The results were, well, unimpressive. I set aside about 20% as irregulars. They have very obvious layering lines where the alloy solidified during the pour. I didn't intend to buy a bullet sizing die, just slosh them around in the liquid lube and let dry.
When I read the Cast Bullet Handbook, it goes into great detail about alloys and techniques that I have no intention of using (e.g. high temp casting, gas checks, paper wrapping, etc). What I'm looking for is just some basic, rule of thumb techniques that will allow me to cast bullets for practice, without a huge investment. Store-bought copper-clad practice bullets are only about 8¢ each. I decided in 9 mm only because I have many hundreds of .38 & .45 practice bullets on hand.
I decided I needed to do more with that ~50 lbs of lead, so I bought a mold for 125 gn 9 mm RN pistol bullets and some liquid bullet lube. So far, I've cast about 100. The results were, well, unimpressive. I set aside about 20% as irregulars. They have very obvious layering lines where the alloy solidified during the pour. I didn't intend to buy a bullet sizing die, just slosh them around in the liquid lube and let dry.
When I read the Cast Bullet Handbook, it goes into great detail about alloys and techniques that I have no intention of using (e.g. high temp casting, gas checks, paper wrapping, etc). What I'm looking for is just some basic, rule of thumb techniques that will allow me to cast bullets for practice, without a huge investment. Store-bought copper-clad practice bullets are only about 8¢ each. I decided in 9 mm only because I have many hundreds of .38 & .45 practice bullets on hand.