Looks like some painkillers in the background of the last picture UNFY. Giving you a headache figuring this out? lol
ROFL. Taken at my desk at work
. And yeah, ibuprofen. More for my back than headaches hehehe. Sorry about looking a mess, been a long night at work and then a bit of fiddling with hollow point drill guide stuff.
You can also modify your existing mold to drop hollow point bullets.
*You* might be able to... I don't have a lathe nor a mill nor .....
Hollow pointing jig.
* 2x2 piece of wood
* 5/16th's steel rod, cut to 3/4" in length
Found the drill size that matched some 6D nails (what I chose for PC jig). Then picked a tiny size or two bigger to act as the drill guide. Yeah, it's a one-off bit ya gotta buy separate.
Drilled a slightly smaller than 5/16th's hole in a 1x3 to hold the rod while was drilling the guide hole.
Anyhoo, attempted to drill down the center of it using a not so great drill press at work. it's a bit off center
.... but.. for proof of concept I'm content. Also, the bit I was using has a 1 inch cutting depth... so ended up snapping the bit towards the end (original goal was a 1" guide hole, not 3/4" heh).
In the 2x2, drilled a slightly smaller than 5/16th's hole all the way through, then on the opposite end drilled a 13/32's hole. 13/32 ~= .406, I'm working with .40 bullets... so... yeah. Turns out that PC without sizing them first - it's a snug fit in the hole (I forgot to bring an uncoated unsized bullet with me... unsized virgin casts fit properly).
Anyhoo, bullet base sticks out of the bottom of the board, allowing ya to push / clamp the piece of wood to something flat, thus holding the bullet in place (instead of free spinning).
Then use a hand drill (preferably slower speed) to drill out the hollow point.
I'll stick a nail or drill bit through the hole and use my calipers to see if I can spin the steel rod to try to center it better.
As of right now, the thickness of the wall of the hollow point at the outer tip of the nose/ogive is 0.105 along 3 axis, and 0.110 along the 'long' fourth axis.
We've got a better drill press at work, when I re-attempt it, can try with that thing.