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Author Topic: Powder Coating Lead Bullets  (Read 33258 times)

Offline bk09

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #100 on: April 12, 2013, 05:55:16 PM »
Hey UNFY can you send me the link to the gun you got at harbor freight? Might make a trip up there tonight and practice on fishing jigs.

Offline SS_N_NE

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #101 on: April 12, 2013, 06:56:28 PM »
I plan to make a tool that I can chuck up in my lathe or drill press which will cut a HP cavity in my subsonic blackout bullets. 

I would recommend a collet. Depending on your lathe or even the drill press, a collet can be used to grip a bullet holding it very centered while not putting any damage on the OD.  A "center drill" bit would make a very nice hollow point cut and are available in different diameters followed by a 60 degree chamfer.  The collet is installed in place of a chuck on the lathe or drill press. I imagine a holder could be made for an RCBS puller collet if one wanted.

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #102 on: April 12, 2013, 09:52:46 PM »
http://www.harborfreight.com/10-30-psi-powder-coating-system-94244.html

On the north 90-whatever-th store here in Omaha, it's along the left hand side of the store, possibly on the isle *facing* the far left wall. edit: left as in you walked into the door and are looking at the store.  Near air compressors and air hoses / attachments.

Make sure you have pc gun, an air compressor, some face masks (like nurses), safety goggles / face shield (not just shooting glasses), a toaster oven (find something $30-$35 or something... ya don't want the smallest oven they make basically... i got that, its a tad annoying heh), powder, air hose, maybe air fittings. I'm also using a cardboard box (bought one for a buck) as my paint hood.

« Last Edit: April 12, 2013, 09:55:01 PM by unfy »
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline DangerousDrummer

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #103 on: April 12, 2013, 09:56:14 PM »
I would recommend a collet. Depending on your lathe or even the drill press, a collet can be used to grip a bullet holding it very centered while not putting any damage on the OD.  A "center drill" bit would make a very nice hollow point cut and are available in different diameters followed by a 60 degree chamfer.  The collet is installed in place of a chuck on the lathe or drill press. I imagine a holder could be made for an RCBS puller collet if one wanted.

I used an unsized case for a collet. Split it down the neck in 3 places, then chuck the case up in the jaws. My SOCOM case worked well but I can imagine some big rimmed cases might not work. A center point drill is what I used  to create HPs. That being said, it is a pain to drill each bullet individually so I am trying something new in the morning.

I modified my 458 mold this afternoon to create a semi-boat tail bullet with a 1/8 hole centered in the base. This was done by creating a new base plug (the second since I started this project) that has a 1/8 pin about 3/16 long. This will allow placing the bullets nose up in my coating tray and the boat tail should ensure that the base of the bullet still gets a good coat of powder. I will take pictures tomorrow after I cast and coat, then it's off to the range for some testing. I will try to compare grouping and record speeds of uncoated and coated. I do not have a sizing die for the 458s so I hope I dont have seating issues, but will not know until I cast, coat and load.
« Last Edit: April 12, 2013, 10:02:36 PM by DangerousDrummer »

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #104 on: April 12, 2013, 10:39:07 PM »
I would say both the lands and grooves, so anywhere it makes contact with the barrel.  Leaving the base uncoated might lead to a little vaporization and lead deposits, but from what I've read a lot of guys do just fine with it set that way.  I think the bearing surface is a much bigger contributor to leading.

For bk/gg: You're spewing a powder sugar cloud of 6-8 inch diameter out of the gun.  You aint gonna have precision.

Anyhoo, the bearing surfaces of the bullet are a requirement, and with the softer alloy / high-for-lead-charge I use, the base really helps as well.

The CB thread had a recent post of a guy loading up ~500 powder coat bullets just sitting on the aluminum foil bases down and they shot fine for him and a buddy.  Unaware of the charge or alloy or bullet size he was using.



The HP mold with the push pins... I *think* i can make that with a drill press (assuming I can get my hands on a drill press with minimal play/wander).  Might also want to fetch the vice that you can chuck a drill into (holds drill steady) to make a cheap and far from accurate lathe ... but with a gentle touch I *should* be able to get *something* of a cone using that and a file.  Should also allow me to make the grooves for the E-rings (so the pins are captive).

I've not done a lot of reading on the subject matter, but I assume the HP stem itself would be a brass rod... possibly the ejector pins as well ?

I won't be attempting any of this any time soon -- I don't have spare molds I can afford to munge up heh.


hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline bk09

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #105 on: April 13, 2013, 12:16:20 AM »
http://www.harborfreight.com/10-30-psi-powder-coating-system-94244.html

On the north 90-whatever-th store here in Omaha, it's along the left hand side of the store, possibly on the isle *facing* the far left wall. edit: left as in you walked into the door and are looking at the store.  Near air compressors and air hoses / attachments.

Make sure you have pc gun, an air compressor, some face masks (like nurses), safety goggles / face shield (not just shooting glasses), a toaster oven (find something $30-$35 or something... ya don't want the smallest oven they make basically... i got that, its a tad annoying heh), powder, air hose, maybe air fittings. I'm also using a cardboard box (bought one for a buck) as my paint hood.


Thanks, looked at that one and it seems to get some of the better reviews of ones HF carries. Now I gotta figure out what I'm going to do for a compressor... Pros and cons of oil and oil-less?

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #106 on: April 13, 2013, 02:38:30 AM »
Thanks, looked at that one and it seems to get some of the better reviews of ones HF carries. Now I gotta figure out what I'm going to do for a compressor... Pros and cons of oil and oil-less?

While I was there, I picked up their 3 gallon hotdog compressor with regulator.... it was on sale as well and I dunno where my other lil compressor went.  It's link:

http://www.harborfreight.com/13-horsepower-3-gallon-100-psi-psi-oilless-air-compressor-69269.html

You'll want a compressor with a regulator, without a doubt.... and no sense in buying an ultra cheap compressor and then buying a regulator to add on to it.  Buy a (cheap) compressor that has a regulator on it.

For PC, it's generally suggested that you fetch an oilless.

If you get one that takes oil, you'll want to also pick up an oil separator.  Cheapies can be had for $8-$15.  The HF gun claims the black bulb at it's air inlet is a water separator or whatever, but I wouldn't put too much stock in it getting rid of oil as well.

I've not got that much experience with air compressors.  Bother had a big one back in the day, we use big ones here at the shop... but outside of looking at numbers for output and size of tank, I'm a bit... 'eh?'.

For the PC stuff, the lil 3 gallon compressor has enough oomf just fine.  Takes ~2-3min (i think) to come up to pressure and kicks on a second time when doing the 8x10 sheet of bullets.  I wouldn't call it quiet either.

The manual for the PC system says it wants 3.5CFM @ 30psi.  Just about any small "normal" compressor can do that, but the hobbyist airgun things won't (they're 0.5 @ 20psi usually).

My old pancake compressor i had in a cardboard box with 1/4" styrofoam sheets around it.  It could still breath, but that knocked the noise down a fair bit (don't get me wrong, still loud).  I'll be looking into making proper wooden box for this compressor with some sound deadening ceiling tiles (i hate noise... and am a minor audiophile heh).

If you're looking for something quieter, a belt driven oil compressor is more in line with what you want... and most belt drive compressors tend to last longer and are quieter and stuff (and they'll all be oil based btw).

If ya want something that will power a bunch of air tools (it's tempting to go that route heh... and in fact I *will* be when I get my own place) - you'll prolly want a 25 - 30 gallon tank minimum... prolly closer to 50-60 or more :).

If ya do build a box for your compressor, remember it needs to breath (and that you need to be able to get to it).  Heat can also be a very bad thing.  When I build the box for my lil compressor, it'll have a window for the gauges, external air hook up port, and a quiet AC fan in it for air circulation.
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #107 on: April 13, 2013, 09:24:07 AM »
Was going to go to the Lincoln coffee thing, but didn't have jig making and other stuff finished up in time :(... owell.

The hindu foot rest is built (76 posts, 1 inch centers, staggered rows).  used a 12x18 sheet of 26ga galvanized steel (cheap, pretty sturdy).  Used some 6D nails as the posts. Did clear off the sheet metal sheer at work (see another post about me crying)... and got it cut to size, then cut another one.  1 sheet for the holes to stick nail through, the other sheet as a backing (to avoid welding).

Do note - I didn't plan my riveting... thought at first '4 will do' like a simpleton.  So... it's kinda ugly (and self defeating pic to demonstrate heh).  Plan the riveting holes if ya aint gonna tack weld nails in place.



hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #108 on: April 13, 2013, 09:38:00 AM »
Hey UNFY can you send me the link to the gun you got at harbor freight? Might make a trip up there tonight and practice on fishing jigs.



Concerning the little hotdog air compressor I picked up:

Air delivery: 0.6 CFM at 90 PSI, 1 CFM at 40 PSI

This is quite a bit less than 3.5CFM @ 30psi. The airgun suggests

You've been warned ;)

hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline SS_N_NE

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #109 on: April 13, 2013, 09:49:46 AM »
A good thing about CFM is that you can get by on less provided the use is not continous. In other words, spraying is often in short bursts and the tank reserve will keep up for the most part.

Air tools that run for a long period of time (sand blasting, die grinder, etc.) tend to quickly use up the tank reserve and the pump can not keep up with the demand...then you need a bigger compressor that is compatible with the intended load/use.

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #110 on: April 13, 2013, 02:01:58 PM »
Drilled new holes for the hollow pointing jig, works good now.  0.106 - 0.1.07 all the way round now :)
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline DangerousDrummer

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #111 on: April 13, 2013, 04:37:34 PM »
Ok, I didn't get to the range because I just ran out of time. My pin in the mold base plug was too long which made it hard to drop the bullets out of the mold, so I incrementally shortened it and also added some taper.


I checked pressing into a case and adjusting my SOCOM dies using a case guage(the SOCOM is VERY unforgiving). Then cast enough for a full PC batch. I also used my MagLight to make sure I did not see any shine through the coat. The loaded tray in the oven..


Out of the oven. This shows the semi-boatail bottom with pin hole. The coverage is good.


Ten test rounds loaded. Note the FrogLube, I use it as my bullet lube. Did you know it will not burn? I use it on my molds also. It disappears when cold and reappears when hot if initially properly applied. It ain't grease and ain't oil so you cannot mix it with either. It MUST be applied when the surface is hot so that it can absorb in the molecules of the metal.


Ready for the range. The PC bullets along with the hollow points cut with a center drill. Gonna rain tomorrow, so maybe next week I can test with the chrono.

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #112 on: April 14, 2013, 10:06:07 AM »
looking sweet, dangerous!  i know folks are curious how things behave in rifle, and big bore is a noted exception to what ppl have repoted :P

my drill guide jig thing is a failure.  the guide is too close to the bullet nose face, thus the material doesn't really have anywhere to go and... yeah... :(

pushing it back didn't help either.

trying a few case trimmer hollow points (3/8ths or so ?) ... they wibble wobble on the nails which aint cool.

i'm at a loss for the moment on HP jig / nail setup.  i *really* don't wanna drill out all those rivits and replace the nails with something bigger-hp friendly (for when eventually getting hp molds maybe).

for now this means the wire lube groove jig.

hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline DangerousDrummer

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #113 on: April 14, 2013, 01:32:00 PM »
looking sweet, dangerous!  i know folks are curious how things behave in rifle, and big bore is a noted exception to what ppl have repoted :P

my drill guide jig thing is a failure.  the guide is too close to the bullet nose face, thus the material doesn't really have anywhere to go and... yeah... :(

pushing it back didn't help either.

trying a few case trimmer hollow points (3/8ths or so ?) ... they wibble wobble on the nails which aint cool.

i'm at a loss for the moment on HP jig / nail setup.  i *really* don't wanna drill out all those rivits and replace the nails with something bigger-hp friendly (for when eventually getting hp molds maybe).

for now this means the wire lube groove jig.



I have a saying.. "perserverance beats brilliance". It has served me well over the years while working R&D in fishing rod design, and especially software design and programming.

There are two main concerns that I have.
1. How well does the coating hold up on the lands? I should probably allow a longer curing time before loading or shooting.
2. Balance? As near as I can tell, the coating is more perfect than the casting imperfections.

So back to perserverance. When struggling with a process design, the first question to ask is what is my final goal?

Shoot inexpensive cast bullets with no leading and no gas checks.

As far as I know there are three ways to achieve this
1. Plating We are still working on this process
2. Powder coating. Our current process R&D
3. Old school sabots. Yes these will work in cartridges also.

Both 1 and 3 have more process steps so they are more complicated, which leads us to powder coating which is relatively simple and inexpensive.

So what are the process steps?

1. Cast and inspect the bullets.

2. Size if needed. I think sizing is not required for larger calibers and sizing risks adding lube to the bullets which should be removed prior to coating.

3. Clean the bullets

4. Coat the bullets. (this is the step that determines the final quality). There is one main objective of coating. Uniformity! We want 100% coverage while covering all sides the same amount. The faster the bullet and spin the more this is critical.

5. Bake the bullets. Ding! Bullets are done.

Step 4 is the critical step, and the one that is the hardest. So the problem is, how to hold the bullets while coating which allows direct transfer to the oven with the least disturbance?

Obviously a tray that fits into the oven is required. Easy decision

Now how to hold the bullets? Bullets with lube grooves seem the obvious choice. But remember, we want uniformity for balance, so can we really use the grooves and expect coating uniformity? I do not think so. The only way to achieve balance is to hold the bullets from the center because any place that the holding jig is touching the bullet will not get coated. So if you want balanced bullets, I think the lube grooves are out. So hold the bullets by the center.. There are only two ways to achieve this.
1. Some sort of clamp with pins.
2. A single pin which will require some sort of centered hole.

Which is simpler (kiss is always best for processes)? A single pin.

1. Mount pins to the tray. Relatively easy. BTW I like your method better as there is less warping.
Now mount the bullets on the pin.

2. Mount the bullets on the pins. A centered hole is required for balance. Hollow point bullets are perfect if you have a hollow point mold. Unfortunately, neither of my molds are HP, so I have to come up with a way to put centered hole in a bullet. Luckily I have a lathe, because without one you may be able to put a hole in either the base or point of a bullet but it likely will not be centered. For the muzzleloader I chucked each bullet and drilled. Hole is centered and with drilling soft lead there is no dust but the bit does tend to grab, but this is very time consuming. For my 458 mold, it had a core plug which I was able to replace with a plug that has a pin. In your case, without a lathe, you are pretty much restricted to HPs.

So you have HPs  but the pins are too small for the HP holes. Two options..
1. Replace the pins. Lose all the fine work you have done installing them? I don't think so!
2. Find something to use as a bushing. Sounds a lot easier to me.

So a bushing..
A. OD matches ID of one part, bullet end
B. ID matches OD of the other. Pin end

Your nails are pointed so B is not a critical demension but a bushing that will fit closely to the largest diameter of the nail will prevent wobble on B, and an OD that closely matches the bullet Id is best.

What comes to mind first is a pellet from a pellet gun. It is lead so resizing may be possible, and it has a hole which could be used as a center hole for drilling if required.  Another thing is a spent shotshell primer. Maybe some brass beads used to make necklaces.. Brass tubing from Hobby Lobby.

I think tubing will be best. OD of B, ID of A.
1. Shorten your nails so it does not take as much.
2. Purchase OD to match ID of HP.
3. Wrap nail with wire to match tubing ID.

Solution!  Hope this helps. My bullets are perfect and I am sure will shoot well as both calibers are shot at fairly slow speeds. All that remains to be seen is how much they prevent leading. I am not worried about vaporized lead as even paper patching prevents vaporization, so all that remains is lead on the lands. Will know for sure next weekend. I still intend to persue plating now that I have a good power supply.

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #114 on: April 14, 2013, 03:31:36 PM »
Well, i did a round of wire jig with lube grooves.  Went fine.

Then decided to just go with the holes-drilled-in-cookie-sheet jig.  Seeing as how it did just fine at the range last time... and allows 3x as many bullets coated at once.

I've noted I have a fair amount of powder on my lazy susan and 'paint hood'.  Will fetch a small brush and attempt to recover it.  It's been out in the moister, so I imagine after recovery it'll need some very violent shaking for an extended period so that it's broken back up etc.  I'll keep it separate from regular powder so can see how it affects things.



Now, as for DD's awesome breakdown on suggestions....

I too was thinking along similar lines.  Powder coat is definitely easiest and seems to work wonderfully on the single bullet type I've bee able to test it with.  I've been pondering plating some more, but trying to avoid getting too involved in it... too many complicated things at once is bound to mean a mess up... and already wanna get my air compressor box built.  It's funny, my box is gonna end up costing more than the compressor ... sigh ...

I will note, for pistol rounds, I don't think the lube groove weight imbalance is such a concern.  On rifle from 100-300 yards, it undoutedly is.

The original design of the rig that became lube-groove-wire jig... I think is a plausible concept.  This would be two needles/nails pinching the bullet on from base & nose.  Maybe not in the vertical form that it was done in... it prolly needs to be horizontal... and then there's the obvious trade off of losing bullet density per tray.  For human simplicity, it would prolly also need to be a spring loaded design.  The wire-groove stuff has been through the curing process twice, i'll try spinning bolts to see if they move at all, i'm willing to bet they don't :).

But, the hollow pointing approach really does seem to be the ideal way to go.

My HP jig appears to be a bust. 

A) For some reason there's a fair bit of play in the guide hole now. 

B) The lack of being able to eject removed material is a huge problem

C) The bullet will still spin in the cavity, even with a decent amount of force applied downward on the jig.

D) You *can* use some vice grips (set to not be very tight) to hold on to the bullet base without deforming it

E) Lead is harder to drill than I thought.... the amount of force required really does hint at wanting to use a drill press to avoid snapping bits and getting better holes

F) If using a drill press, there'd have to be something done to grip bullet bases.  Bolts pushing on a ==( shaped thing come to mind.

G) All of the hollow pointing drill guide jig stuff really wants to be made out of metal rather than wood, thus it's beyond me (darn lack of tooling).

-----------

So.  Hollow point molds.  Bought reconditioned lee/lyman/rcbs molds or from-factory-with-hollow-points will all have large HP cavities for their terminal characteristics.

Yes, the nails are too small for typical hollow point cavities.

So you're right

A) tear apart jig

B) bushings

C) tubing ideas

Tearing apart the jig is a valid solution, and possibly the 'most proper'.  Having proper spindles is just 'correct'.  Buutttt.... it doesn't allow for much in the way of modularity / re-use.

Bushings are an easy work around and do offer some modularity. While more permanent ideas include DD's most interesting pellet idea... to wirewrap .. to... etc... Aluminum foil might quite possibly make for a just fine temporary one ;).

And now for the idea that I really like, and prolly wouldn't have come up with on my own, the brass tubing.

6D nails are 1-7/8ths of an inch in length.  I like that height - makes getting the lower portion (nose in this case) easier.  That said, a point doesn't exactly lend itself to very much given that I have to toss my current HP jig idea.  A pair of bolt cutters to snip off some ends might be in order.

But the thought of being able to take different brass tubings that have been designed to fit different HP cavities is down right awesome.  There's extra work in having to tool up all of the tubes for each style... but... one jig and a box of sheath tubes is so much better than a half dozen jigs.

I'll have to measure the 6D nails again to figure out what their diameter is... if it's a really weird size that doesn't have a matching tube size.... euhhh... we'll deal with that later (tearing apart jig anyway, or even something as simple as good ole aluminum foil again heh... or a wire just to fill up space, etc).

So... for sizing up.... I imagine a center punch or cold punch could get minor sizing done easy enough.

I dunno how ductile brass is.  Could the tip get a cross cut put in it, then the 4 sections folded back over itself (much like how a HP 'flowers' on impact) ?  This way you could adjust size and possible conicalness via the 'petals'.  Maybe it'd have to be annealed first ?

Lets go an opposite direction for just a second.

Take one of your cast HP bullets.

Make a plaster of paris mold of it's cavities (doing proper negatives first, edit: or by removing the hp pins if easy enough).

You should now have a tiny lil thimble sized mold that when filled should match the cavity of your hollow point.

Drill some holes / cut some slits in the end of some brass tubing.

Drop some lead into 'thimble' plaster of paris mold, stuff slitted/holey end of brass tubing in mold, let freeze.  Wallah, a lead ball semi-perm attached to end of brass tubing that perfectly matches your hp cavity.

Sizing down shouldn't be a problem.  Some of the tiny high speed rifle bullets might require fixing a thumb tack to the end of the tube hehehe (can prolly solder it on).
« Last Edit: April 14, 2013, 03:40:57 PM by unfy »
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #115 on: April 15, 2013, 10:22:05 PM »
I'm really digging the brass / aluminum tubing idea.  Really am.

Anyway...

Went shopping today.  Picked up tiny lil brush and dust pan from walmart to attempt powder recovery (rolls eyes) ... it'll be worth a laugh at least :).

Grabbed a small jug of plaster of paris for some mold making down the line.

Also, I've been picking up materials to build a box to throw the compressor in.  I just hate noise. 6 sheets of 2x2 cheap not-quite-plywood.  Some 1x3's, some corner braces, some 1/4 bolts/nuts/washers/lock-washers, a tiny sheet of clear plastic for a picture frame (so can view gauges), and some chest handles.  Haven't laid out the design just yet, it'll be something like 12-16 inches wide, 18 inches long, and 22 inches tall or so.  Plan on having a side 'pocket' on it for holding power chord and air hose.

Also grabbed a cheap 3 conductor extension chord to chop up, a light switch, a 2 outlet .... outlet, a couple electrical boxes for outlet and switch.  Extension chord wires into switch which we be mounted facing the outside of the box... wires from switch will run to the outlets which will be mounted inside the box.  Planning on plugging air compressor and a small AC fan into the outlet.

After it's built, if it's necessary... I also picked up a $10 twin sized foam liner thing and some spray on adhesive to act as additional sound absorption.

Finding a local & cheap fan has been hard.  Radioshack has some for $20-$30.  No thanks.  Cheap bathroom exhaust fans are kinda large but only cost $15 and are relatively quiet (it may end up being this, i dunno).  We've prolly got some 'proper' AC fans (designed like computer fans) at work ... and I can prolly steal one.  We prolly only pay $3 each heh.

This weekend I'll prolly order a HP mold, or maybe next weekend, we'll see.
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #116 on: April 17, 2013, 02:08:44 PM »
Ordered a mold from:

http://www.hollowpointmold.com/

Looks to be high quality, "home made" (akin to the Sharp Shooter USA mold I bought)... so I'm really looking forward to giving it a shot.

.....

Gonna be fiddling with air compressor container over next few days (been getting days/nights straightened out so haven't done much work on anything).  Basically building a box for it to live in to reduce it's noise output and make my life a little simpler.  Only missing a few things, but it should turn out nice.
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #117 on: April 17, 2013, 09:19:38 PM »
Swept up powder from lazy susan and paint hood.... looks like it should recycle just fine.

Waiting on the mold to arrive.

Do have plenty of bullets to load and test in the mean time.  Maybe tomorrow.
hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline unfy

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #118 on: May 10, 2013, 04:21:42 PM »
I hope to get to play with the hollow point mold this weekend.  Certain things have come up that have made it difficult for me to do so at home heh.

Anyhoo....

BKOENIG ... have you gotten to fiddle with this yet ? Surely tax season is over by now ?

The CB thread has had a lot of success heard from those shooting big bore and AAC and slower 30cal stuff.  Including some posts from DangerousDrummer.

A few folks have had even had good luck with 223.

hoppe's #9 is not the end all be all woman catching pheramone people make it out to be ... cause i smell of it 2 or 3 times a week but remain single  >:D

Offline DangerousDrummer

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Re: Powder Coating Lead Bullets
« Reply #119 on: May 11, 2013, 11:39:24 AM »
I hope to get to play with the hollow point mold this weekend.  Certain things have come up that have made it difficult for me to do so at home heh.

Anyhoo....

BKOENIG ... have you gotten to fiddle with this yet ? Surely tax season is over by now ?

The CB thread has had a lot of success heard from those shooting big bore and AAC and slower 30cal stuff.  Including some posts from DangerousDrummer.

A few folks have had even had good luck with 223.



The high speed are going to have to be pretty precise for accuracy. My 285 gn came out sideways at higher speeds.

I think we should not call these bullets "powder coated" anymore. Instead let's call them "Jihadi Lipsticks" just to piss everyone off. Just sayin... After all it is not illegal to be politically incorrect... yet.