The African Hunter Magazine Volume 19 # 1 | Page 12

Gas checked bullets Now, on the plus side, pure lead maintains the molecular cohesion - that is, the resistance to breaking up - that has always made it ideal for casting into bullets, and it also expands reliably across a wide spectrum of velocities resulting in an expanded mushroom inside the body cavity of a game animal. And it is inexpensive. The converse is that no matter what bullet material or configuration you select, all bullets have limitations, and soft lead is no exception. Muzzle velocities above 2,150fps are close to the velocity limit above which the lead itself can deform in flight due to nose pressure, and of course the softer the lead the more bore-leading one can expect. Cast bullets can exhibit serious flaws, such as uneven cores and void, empty spaces, which can be overcome by swaging the bullets - but most folks that I know here in Africa continue to cast their bullets the old-fashioned way. So, though the tendency has been to use jacketed bullets in high-powered rifles, a bullet cast or swaged from slightly harder lead and with a gas check - that cartridge equivalent of a sabot - affixed is certainly a viable alternative. And it can be a lot more fun, too. There are a number of different methods of determining the relative hardness of a metal, but the one used to rate the hardness of lead in reloading circles is the Brinell (BHN) scale, introduced by the Swedish engineer Johan Brinell in 1900. It works by measuring the indentation on a sample caused by a known force applied through an indenter. Though it is less well-suited to harder metals, it works ideally with lead, where a BHN of 5.0 denotes pure lead, and various lead alloys can go up to 35.0. Hardness testers are not overly complicated, and are available to any reloader or bullet caster - perhaps one of the most common is the one that we use at my shooting club, the LBT Hardness Tester. It is solidly constructed, and measures BHN from 6.0-40.0. It takes you about ten seconds to test a cast bullet, and the results are guaranteed accurate to 1 BHN. Lee also offers a test kit that is designed to be used with a reloading press, and there are others. But even harder lead alloys, while still easy to work with in terms of bullet casting, will still leave lead deposits in the bore at higher velocities. I have a seemingly mirror-like finish in the bore of my Colt .45 pistol, but firing cast bullets at even moderate velocities of between 830-850fps will leave annoying lead deposits in the bore. Which is why I shoot Frontier FMJs in competition. But I digress. The solution is the gas check, for which, of course, you need a gas-checked bullet mould. A gas check is a thin cup, usually crafted from copper, zinc or aluminium alloy which is affixed to the base of a lead cast bullet during the reloading process. Generally, gas checks are used with higher-pressure and velocity cartridges to prevent the buildup of lead in the barrel which enhances accuracy. In order for a bullet to be fitted with a gas check it requires a slightly rebated area at the base to allow the gas check to be pressed in place whilst the bullet retains the same diameter, and so the modification has to be incorporated into the mould. The gas check is effectively swaged onto the bullet, covering most or all of the base, during the lubrisizing process. Once fitted, the gas-checked bullet is loaded conventionally. When a high-powered, or magnum round is fired, the high pressures allow propellant gas to escape past the bullet, causing gas cutting of the base which increases lead deposits http://www.africanhunteronline.com Page 12 Hunter Vol. 19 No. 1 African