I'd tried this with .410's #6 and parrafin. It didn't work very well. The wax disintegrates into wax dust and the shot spreads like there was no wax in it. I was going to try it again with a softer wax - bullet lube - but never got around to it.
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Ya, filing off the tip on a hollow base round caused the lead to go down range and leave the jacket as a bore obstruction, I actually have a 1910 round that was modified commercially like this, I found the proof that it was made in the 20s and not allowed to be sold as it was unsafe.
Well, you just got 70 of them, and you did not take all that much time to do it.
Try to find 22 HP, 219 Zipper, 8x56R, 14ga shotgun shells, etc, etc, all legal and a lot more rare than 410 slugs.
Glad you were able to find some, now make sure that you know where they hit before you take them out, way too many people throw a box of slugs in their pocket for deer without ever pulling the trigger at a target.
I think the way the idea of armour piercing ammo is getting played out these days leads to the misunderstanding.. The idea of it only applying to pistol ammo has gotten lost. It lacks more explanation why the prohibition. Our police use body armour for their protection, so they don't want armour piercing ammo for handgun in general circulation as handguns are the convenient of weapon of choice used by the criminal element. That said the body armour, that is use is ineffective against high powder rifle ammo or event buckshot in a shotgun. A while back there was an article of a guy who got his hands on some conventional body amour, put it on and asked his friend to fire a load of buckshot at him to prove its effectiveness. The principal behind body armour is that a spinning bullet get knurled in the fabric and gets stop. Buckshot, however, does not spin, so went straight through the vest and killed the guy.
You don't stop hunting because you grow old. You grow old because you stop hunting.
- Gun Nut