I just cant help myself when we get a heavy snow fall, more then a foot of very heavy wet snow, that I just have to plant a bunch of bullets in it.
Well this summer I got a couple new .44's and moulds so I put over 100 bullets in that snow using alloys with 1/16 to 1/40 lead/tin and 1/16 to 1/40 lead but I used a roll of no lead solder that has 5% antimony with 95% tin in the roll. The bullets are the long nosed prolate and elliptical I want to use for long range. I want my alloy as soft as I can use and still hold the integrity of the nose to keep the nose setback to a minimum. It's going to be a long wait before they will show up.
I also shot a bunch of GG money bullets and PP. I havent done much with the GG bullets in the past but my Daughter likes using them so lets see what it takes to keep the nose in good shape.
Today I shot the last six 1/40 lead tin PP money bullets and one managed to blow on through the snow pile so I got out the metal detector and chased it down.
I took some careful measurements of this bullet because in the past shooting these I found all sorts of dimensional changes but most were shot out of the .44-90 bn that has a pretty stiff load of powder and the more the powder charge behind the bullet the more it gets molded like putty but I wanted to see what the .45-70 and the .45-90 will do to the soft money bullet noses.
Below is the one I found today and it was shot out of the .45-90 with 89 grains of 2F KIK and it got pushed around pretty hard but the nose set back was straight but it did get the wasp waist like most of the soft long nose bullets I have looked at.
It will be interesting to look at the soft bullets with just a trace of antimony in them compared to the lead/tin mixes.
Despite the amount of nose setback there is no reason that the accuracy should suffer with this bullet. But the money nose does end up like a postell type nose.
Below are before and after shot.