Need a little help here, I bought a lee 430-310 GC mold and when I bought it I also ordered some 44 cal gas checks but they are very loose. After running them through the .430 sizer they are still loose. di I order the wrong ones or is there something I don't know about here.
please help me figure this out.
Why Johnny Ringo you look like someone just walked over your grave.
Need a little help here, I bought a lee 430-310 GC mold and when I bought it I also ordered some 44 cal gas checks but they are very loose. After running them through the .430 sizer they are still loose. di I order the wrong ones or is there something I don't know about here.
please help me figure this out.The portion of the mold where the GC goes is too small. Call Lee.
What alloy are you using? Higher antimony content will increase diameter of the bullet and the gas check area. The mold temp to hot can also cause small size. Was your sizing die engaging the bullets and doing any sizing?
I am going to do some measuring tomorrow but I think they might have cast a bit small. I am using 20-1
Why Johnny Ringo you look like someone just walked over your grave.
I'd be really surprised if you got .430 in a Lee mold with 20-1.
If God didn't want man to eat animals, he wouldn't have made them out of MEAT!The last thing I want to do is hurt you. But it's still on my list.
That boolit needs shot pretty fast. 20 to 1 will not work very good.
A GC will fit a .429 boolit so even if it cast .0005" small, the check should still crimp on.
It should not matter what alloy is used.
I am sure it is the alloy I have an older mold and the boolits are also a bit small, the .430 sizing die is barely shining up the driving bands. I am planning on using these in a .444 rifle. I will have to brew up a batch of alloy with a higher tin content. I shoot most of rifles with BP or low velocity smokeless loads so most of them do fine with the 20-1.
Why Johnny Ringo you look like someone just walked over your grave.
I am sure it is the alloy I have an older mold and the boolits are also a bit small, the .430 sizing die is barely shining up the driving bands. I am planning on using these in a .444 rifle. I will have to brew up a batch of alloy with a higher tin content. I shoot most of rifles with BP or low velocity smokeless loads so most of them do fine with the 20-1.OK, soft is good. Tin will not increase size. I still think the mold needs fixed. You can lap it yourself to get a better GC fit.Boolit Master Join DateApr 2005LocationIowaPosts366
I have seen molds all over the place with GC fits.
I'm going to take a guess on this as it sounds mirror image to my first casting with that mold. On mine I'm pretty sure I didn't get the mold or sprue plate clean enough before my first casting. In fact I know I didn't as I was in a hurry and followed Lee's instructions. What was happening for me is the bullet bases did not want to fill out 100% leaving a visible small gap between the edge of the mold and base of bullet. When I ran them thru the 430 sizer with Hornady checks a few would be loose. I had a bag of Gators and those would crimp on tight. Since then I have soaked the sprue plate and mold in my cleaner and then gave it a couple of good scrubbings of hot water and Zud with a toothbrush. I also gave it the slightest bevel of the parting line of the mold blocks to vent the base. I haven't cast with it since as I just don't need or use very many of those heavy weight wrist breakers. I really need to beagel it or lap to 433.
Seeing as I have two of these molds I will read up on the beagle process and give it a try on the old mold, If it works out I can always do it on the new style lee mold as well.
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