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
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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).
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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
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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).