Bullet making is a laborious, boring, mindless job……….If I hadn’t jumped into making my own some 10-12 years ago for the simple reason of cost, I would never have done it. It seams that when you make your own that you get requests from everyone asking can I try some of your bullets? For those that get into this, a few here and a few there it will soon add up to a $150 to $ 180 bucket of jackets, lead @ $1.85 a pound as of now, and then there is the time spent sitting in a room doing this boring mindless job. Word of advise for the newcomer, if your buddies say I’ll help you make bullets so I can get some, DON”T, for when you loose that shot that meant the difference of a win or loss you will wonder, was it a bad bullet that my buddy missed?? Or when a piece of dirt gets into a die and scratches it and you find out after 500 pieces that something is wrong or one gets stuck in the point-up die for lack of lube and the list goes on.
My point, it is a one man job if you are going to control quality and minimize problems.
I have started a segment on my home page titled Bullet Making, as for right now I only have made it thru the core cutting and swaging, as time permits I will finish the other operations. I started this to explain in pictures and text what methods I use to make jacketed bullets as an attempt to help or enlighten the newcomer. In no way do I advocate that my way is the best way, it is just what I have found to work for me.
I am attempting to attach a short video of my core cutting method but not sure if it will work.
Best of luck to the newcomers……Rick