Following off the 158gn 38 bullets thread - I was wondering how those who process 'dirty' range lead. I've seen various videos on the subject, but mostly American. How do you all do it - and more importantly, how do you do it safely.
Following off the 158gn 38 bullets thread - I was wondering how those who process 'dirty' range lead. I've seen various videos on the subject, but mostly American. How do you all do it - and more importantly, how do you do it safely.
A buddy of mine takes the assorted crap from the backstop traps and processes it into cast bullets.
He simply chucks the lot into a suitable bowl and applies heat to it. This produces a lot of smoke as the bits of target and target backing and target frame and linatex burn off so he does this outside. When the smoke has subsided he "waltzes the pot" which is an old plumber's term (he is in fact an old plumber) meaning to gently but thoroughly mix it all. Everything which is not lead floats to the top and can be skimmed off (mostly staples and jackets and ash). Eventually no more crap will float up. Important not to overheat the lead - if the pot continues to produce white powder on the surface then the lead is too hot and the lead is oxidising. He then ladles this into ingots which he later uses to feed his Lee Lead pot for casting. He does not flux the lead (which came as a surprise to me but it works for him). The resulting bullets are visually as good as any cast bullets you can buy, He sizes the bullets and later lubes them with liquid Alox and they work really well. He has observed that the black/grey dust found in the butt traps is in fact mostly fine lead dust so do not sieve it out.
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With any scrap lead I’m melting I tend to heat it as one in an iron pot rather than dropping it into already molten lead. Saves the impressive but painful complications of getting a drop of water in there.
Then it’s just a case of skimming the crud and jackets and fluxing. I normally use sawdust or beeswax for fluxing.
Are you not worried about lead fumes?
Buy a riddle from Screwfix. Riddle, wash them off in a bucket, leave to dry. Stick them in a pan over a camping gas burner and heat them up. Pour the melted lead into cup cake trays to make round ingots.
The jacketed bullets are separated and individually clipped as it lets the lead flow out easier and sealed FMJs can split explosively. They also have softer cores.
How do you process ALL the grit out... Surely just a few grains of errant sand will bugger a rifle barrel in short order?
Last edited by DesG; 27-09-2022 at 02:21 PM.
[I]DesG
Domani e troppo tardi
Just make sure if you remove lead, the range owner knows you're doing it. Some can get very funny, as they claim to own it.
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