Anyone know the alloy composition of Lead Pellets ?
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Anyone know the alloy composition of Lead Pellets ?
Being cheap by nature, I was hoping to melt down all of my expended pellets and start casting bullets for some of my firearms to save money.
It would help to know what material I'm working with.
Does anyone know what is in our little .177 friends? Pure lead? Lead / tin?, etc.
Thanks again to those that know things no one else knows!
It would help to know what material I'm working with.
Does anyone know what is in our little .177 friends? Pure lead? Lead / tin?, etc.
Thanks again to those that know things no one else knows!
Pure lead is too soft, so antimony is added to increase hardness. Otherwise pellets would get damaged when you shake them around or squeeze them too tight when handling. The amount of antimony is so small that you would have really hard time detecting it by measuring density. However, it is enough to make the resulting alloy hard enough, which might not make it a best choice for bullet casting.
Pellets by Vogel, H&N and RWS are basically 99.2 - 99.5 % lead. the other ingrediants are tin and antimony and some trace elements like arsenic and silver . That .8 % mix does'nt sound like much but it is essential to an accurate pellet.
I know normal bullet lead is often 3 to 5% Antimony, (97-95% lead) which is much harder. I also know that a roll of this lead made into pellet size wire and processed through a pellet making machine makes 10 shot groups that looks like they came from a shot gun.
I know normal bullet lead is often 3 to 5% Antimony, (97-95% lead) which is much harder. I also know that a roll of this lead made into pellet size wire and processed through a pellet making machine makes 10 shot groups that looks like they came from a shot gun.
And the AP barrel will soon look like a shotgun barrelpilkguns wrote:Pellets by Vogel, H&N and RWS are basically 99.2 - 99.5 % lead. the other ingrediants are tin and antimony and some trace elements like arsenic and silver . That .8 % mix does'nt sound like much but it is essential to an accurate pellet.
I know normal bullet lead is often 3 to 5% Antimony, (97-95% lead) which is much harder. I also know that a roll of this lead made into pellet size wire and processed through a pellet making machine makes 10 shot groups that looks like they came from a shot gun.