
EJSG19 wrote:Its quiet in here. Almost too quiet...
:shudder:
EJSG19 wrote:I thought the scary suspense music from Jaws might be more appropriate.
Seismic Sam wrote:Uhhhh... Gee, I don't feel like giving birth to a cow today. Sorry guys!!
It IS common knowledge that cast lead bullets slide down the barrel with less friction than jacketed bullets, so for the exact same powder and bullet weight (AND shape!!) the pressures should be lower for cast lead bullets. This doesn't necessarily translate into higher velocity because of less friction, but the part about the pressures is conventional wisdom.
NOW, you may find a jacketed bullet load that has a higher max powder charge than the same shape/weight cast bullet, and the reason for that is that the cast bullet simply won't stand up to those pressures without losing traction on the lands and/or allowing the gas to blow by. That's mostly why they sell gas checks for cast lead bullets, so that this doesn't happen. So even though there may be jacketed loads that are significantly hotter than cast bullet loads, that doesn't necessarily mean that using a jacketed bullet max load with a cast bullet will get you into deep trouble, unless you lead up the barrel so much that you reduce the bore diameter.
As a matter of fact, that was the exact problem I had with my Smith 500 with plated bullets, and while I could shoot them with heavy powder charges like jacketed bullets, all I got was absolutely shytty consistency that you could actually FEEL, with one plated load being light and the next being the usual azz-kick that you should get from a heavy 500 Smith load. Now, a Smith 500 is pretty much indestructible (the original cylinder design was tested to DESTRUCTION @ over 100,000 PSI before they ever built the rest of the gun..) so I wasn't worried too much.
I would suspect with most other MODERN guns, the same thing would happen, and if you ran a cast bullet at jacketed powder charge levels, you would get the same krappy and spotty performance, but there's a big difference between that and a kaboom. In addition, most lead bullets are a fairly hard alloy, so apart from black powder and SASS shooting you won't find soft lead bullets designed for any hot calibers anyway.
Seismic Sam wrote:Never shot anything but plated and cast with my 500, and I think you probably know that. (Linotype?? Geez, you'd have to be an old phart like me to even know what linotype was.) The Smith 500 is simply not a cast bullet gun. You can push plated bullets (and the Ranier's hold together better that the Berry's) to a little over 1400, and then your velocity SD goes to hell quickly. I've had 5 shot strings with an extreme velocity spread of 250 FPS. (BARF!!!) The Hornady factory load with the 350 grain XTP runs 1900 FPS (@2960 ft-lbs!!), and you can push a Speer 325 to 2000 and a 300 grain Gold Dot to 2100.
EJSG19 wrote:Oh yeah, now we've got the right atmosphere. Now to get this "common knowledge" situation straightened out.
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