jackieschmidt
Gold $$ Contributor
^^^^^^^Why? Why not just buy a bullet for the application?
^^^^^^^Why? Why not just buy a bullet for the application?
I may regrettably be familiar with these bullets. Big open tip, low bc, erratic amounts of core showing in tip?Right now, I'm trying to work up a load for some 34-grain .20 caliber bullets that aren't up to my usual level of satisfaction in how they shoot. And I bought a box of 5,000. 1/2" MOA is all I have been able to get out of them
If you're seeing different amounts of core showing in the tip, you might improve uniformity by drilling them to a uniform depth. Doesn't sound like you should open up the tips any further (I wouldn't, on 20s). And you might try sorting them by weight, and loading in batches by weight.I may regrettably be familiar with these bullets. Big open tip, low bc, erratic amounts of core showing in tip?
What I will say is they are 'cheap'. With no support under the thin jacket all my seater stems inflicted some amount of damage to the ogive.
If you break the code let us know...
Ha I think I have the same ones too. After working with about 75 to 100 of them I was so discouraged the box just takes up space on the shelf now.I may regrettably be familiar with these bullets. Big open tip, low bc, erratic amounts of core showing in tip?
What I will say is they are 'cheap'. With no support under the thin jacket all my seater stems inflicted some amount of damage to the ogive.
If you break the code let us know...
Yes - that sounds like my bullets. And they WERE cheap! I was looking for a super-cheap load for "close-in", high volume shooting at ground squirrels, so as to save some barrel wear on my longer-range rifles. At 1/2" MOA, they are satisfactory for that. Most powders shot them into 1" to 1 1/2" groups. Varmint powder got them to 1/2" or a bit better. My old lot of "T" military powder was a bit better, but I don't want to use that up on varmints. Accurate LT32 was also good - but was almost 60% higher in cost than the Varmint powder - which defeated the purpose of the whole exercise.I may regrettably be familiar with these bullets. Big open tip, low bc, erratic amounts of core showing in tip?
What I will say is they are 'cheap'. With no support under the thin jacket all my seater stems inflicted some amount of damage to the ogive.
If you break the code let us know...
Depends what they are used for. Also depends on what you mean by improved terminal ballistics.I have previously posted elsewhere about drilling rifle-bullet tips to improve terminal ballistics
Back in my days, the Mini-14 had a 10 twist while the Colt AR-15 had a 11 or 12 twist. The standard, off the self loads were 55 grain FMJ made for the Colt!!! Knowing that a more rapid twist requires a longer bearing surface bullets, I had to improvize. At that time, my choices were the 60gr Hornaday HP, 63gr Sierra GK semi spitzer, or the Speers 70gr RN. The Hornaday tangent designed was too short a bearing surface. The 63 grouped great, but did not expand on praise dog! The Speers bullets grouped tighter, but were Hot Core design.Why? Why not just buy a bullet for the application?
Back in those days, I worked in a manufacturing plant and was classified Machinist A (Master because I could set-up and operate any machine in the plant and exceed production quota) and Tool Maker B (Journeyman) while going to school for Engineering. Had access to engine lathes, vertical mills, black diamond drill sharpeners, surface grinders and lappers, horizontal and vertical water cooled grinders, and tool cutters with diamond cups and diamond cut off wheels for carbide tooling! 2nd shifter tool crib operator. The newest machine (brand new) in the plant was a Brown and Sharpes NC (Numerically Controlled) indexing vertical mill (3-axises). The programming was executed using key punch papers tape rolls!!!Pretty cool story. Wish I had your machinist skills (and, evidently, tools).
Fortran IV, the scientific/mathematics programmers language!!! The good old Keys punch cards. You wrote the number on the cards in the order of the programming, just in case you dropped the stack and had to reorder before run time!!Pretty neat toys. I wrote my first computer programs in the same era, when computer input and output was on paper tape. Got to college and started on Fortran and punch cards. Wow tech has changed.
For a historical tangent, the association between hollow points and Dum Dum pre-dates WW1. Dum Dum is a town in India, near Kolkata (then Calcutta), where the British colonial government had a munitions factory. There, in the 1890s, a British officer created what would later be termed the Mk II* (or Mk II Special) cartidge in an effort to increase the lethality of the RNFMJ Mk II .303. The Mk II* was properly a soft point rather than a hollow point, but the name stuck. Following on from this work, the Mk III, IV, and V cartridges were developed which actually had hollow points, but were withdrawn from active service after concerns over their legality.(In WWI, soldiers called drilled FMJ bullets "dum dums." It's not my idea.)
The good old wide track paper!!!!Yeah, we had to write it all out on the oversized green and white paper with the lines of rectangles, one uppercase character per rectangle, before we were allowed to punch the cards. . . .