Sat down tonight and decided to get more serious about bullet casting.
Did a little bit of reading, a bunch of video watching. Basically, it was time to move from utility casting (copper plating fodder and PC fodder etc) into something I could do for actual reloading.
So... re-worked casting work area a bit for smoother flow / less movement, and decided to try different procedures (a mix from someone's speed casting techniques and a video). That video would be:
Don't care for the guy's attitude too much, and with a regular $20 lee mold it's not wholly applicable (ie: can't just nudge some hollow point pins)... but... in general things went much better.
Upped temperature on pot a little (lee 4/20... set to 7 instead of 6).
Got mold a bit hotter than I normally would have, in particular the sprue plate. The first half dozen breaks using video guy's method still required tapping sprue plate clear and tapping bullets out. After that, sprue plate was hot enough to not require tapping.
Time between filling mold and cutting sprue reduced to just 2-4 seconds.
Hotter sprue plate and molds seem to nearly completely eliminate the need to tap things with a wooden hammer handle blank. Hand breaks were easy and clean, and bullets typically fell out of the mold with a slight jiggle. Only one in 10-15 breaks would require a tap from wood.
The use of the casting pot foot as a heat sink to cool the mold for quicker progression is a great idea. Faster break, more even temperature control, etc.
Towards the end, I did have some slight sprue plate overheating issues (smearing instead of a clean cut). Just for fun: I forgot to setup a sponge so ended up slobbering all over a sock to act as a coolant.....
Differences from what I do to what the guy in the video does:
I break the sprue over the pot so the lead goes directly back into the pot. I will prolly stop doing this in order to help reduce splashes. Also, due to this, I don't "fling" anything heh.
Wasn't dropping into water (in particular with PC and the 400 degree bake... quenching gets undone).
Prolly increased casting rate by a factor of 5-8, and my reject count is sitting at 10 out of the ~1000 cast. I imagine not tapping on everything a bunch for every break is better for the mold too.
Yay.