• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

End of an era!

SSL

Gold $$ Contributor
Today out of pure boredom, I just finished casting several hundred lead bullets for various calibers (mostly 260-grain .452", 250-grain .432" and 350 and 405-grain .458") and did a quick inventory of my lead stash. Haven't cast for awhile and hadn't paid much attention to the supply and was surprised to see I only have around 100 pounds left.

A little background here...from 1970 until 2000 I worked for a telephone company. The town I was based out of had a lot of aerial cable with lead sheathing. As various sections would go bad they would be replaced with the newer plastic insulation cable and mostly buried where possible. Out of curiosity I took some of the old scrap lead sheathing home and tried casting muzzle-loader balls. Miserable failure. Way too hard to work well. Later, I got into reloading lead bullets in handguns and had the bright idea of trying again. Wonders to behold - that lead cast nicely filled out bullets and, properly lubed, didn't even lead in hot .357 loads (a caliber I have often had leading issues with). I didn't know at the time, but the lead used in telephone cable sheathing averaged 97% lead, 2% tin and 1% antimony (sometimes 3% tin and only a trace of antimony, depending on the manufacturer) and bullets usually cast about 4 to 6 grains heavier than the "nominal" rating of the molds. Clean, melt and pour. Bullets are too hard to expect them to expand much, but leading is non-existent.

Fast forward a few years and the company decided to do a wholesale job of burying almost all the cable and removing all the lead. The scrap pile at the warehouse grew to about 30 feet by 40 feet and at least 10 feet high. At that point in time no one really wanted scrap lead so it just sat there. Every now and then I would load the back of my truck with the scrap lead (with the company's blessings) and take it home. No idea how much I hauled away over the next few years, but I haven't had to buy lead for casting since 1972. Finally, the price of lead rose to the point that we got a bid for the pile and took it. End of free supply, but I have cast thousands of "free" bullets ever since and have enough already cast and stored to probably last me the rest of my life. But like any self-respecting hand-loader, no such thing as too much of any component!
 
Last edited:
Working in construction for over 40 yrs I was able to source it from all kinds of places. Then one day the plumbers couldn't use it pipes anymore. It was phased out of other places I wont disclose, Wheel weights became zinc based. Sad.
 
Dry wall in the radiology dept has lead sheet already glued on. My drywall guy and the custom truck shop call me every now and then. Wheel weights on custom wheels are stick on and have an adhesive back and are pure soft lead. I messed up my first batch with zinc in with the lead. But take side cutters and if it will try to cut and leave a recessed mark it is lead if its too hard to even make a dent it zinc or steel. Use the magnet first. I've probably got 300 or 400 lbs of ingots and a bunch of thick sheet maybe 200 lbs and a half bucket of wheel weights. my friend that owns he auto salvage place in Stuart had a sailboat keel that was in the thousands, not sure if the sold it yet.
 
Not real worried about things. Like I said, I have no idea how many thousand cast bullets I have on hand. May have to just start weighing and find out. No matter. I also have a fair amount of linotype from my friend's father's old printing shop and he says he has a whole lot more that he doesn't want. Also have a couple 5-gallon buckets of wheel weights from the pre-zinc era. I'll survive! ;)
 
my friend that owns he auto salvage place in Stuart had a sailboat keel that was in the thousands, not sure if the sold it yet.
Must be the posting for 2,120 pounds for $2,120? Pretty good chunk of lead!
 
I doubt it they don't usually sell but to their regular commercial buyers. What was the name of the place?
 
I doubt it they don't usually sell but to their regular commercial buyers. What was the name of the place?
Ebay...from Pinellas Point Florida. No business name, but sounds like a marine salvage issue.
 
Made a bunch of bullets with cable sheathing and wheel weights. We would just throw the wheel weights in the pot and the clips would float to the top when they melted. Doug
 
I managed to find a demolition guy taking down a hospital. I bought the lead sheeting from the radiology department for pennies on the dollar. Still haven't used all of it...

:)
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
166,252
Messages
2,214,948
Members
79,496
Latest member
Bie
Back
Top