I thought this was pretty neat.
Anybody who casts their own bullets have you ever tried anything different then lead?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZqnpQxJepI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjfaDKKdEl8
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I thought this was pretty neat.
Anybody who casts their own bullets have you ever tried anything different then lead?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZqnpQxJepI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjfaDKKdEl8
Wonder what the energy is.
On the 45-70 he was getting 3000+ ft per second
Based on his claim of them looking like a 500gr lead core bullet and weighing 100gr at 3000fps he is looking at about 2000ft lbs of energy at the muzzle, 1250ft lbs of energy at 200 yards.
Compared to lead core 45-70 FTX from Hornady at 3000 ft lbs of energy at the muzzle and 1500 at 200 yards.
Aluminum bullets need to be long to have any useful weight to them so they will get into the powder space.
(3000 fps x 3000 fps / 450240) x 100 grs (Al) =1998.9 ft-lbs The real question is how often will you have to rebarrel your firearm over the course of its use. The faster the bullet travels the harder it is on the rifling. (1600 fps x 1600 fps/450240) x 350 grs(lead) = 1990 ft-lbs. So a lead load will provide you with a lot longer barrel life.
You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because yoy stop hunting.
- Gun Nut
Aluminum starts acting weird under high pressure/force, I would avoid it or be ready to do A LOT of testing.
Nice video.
Other then the boys having fun,raises the question-why fix it, if it is not broken?
100 grain 3000 fps .45 diameter???
Guess the boy doesn't know a lot about physics.
Why would you even bother trying it?
Would be good to have incase the werewolves come around lmao