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| Nix.
Not only is it dangerous to you, the battery plates contain (or usta) calcium which will mess up your alloy. |
| Posts: 1570 | Location: Base of the Blue Ridge | Registered: 04 November 2002 |
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| See, I learn something new everyday. That sure didn't take long. Thanks a lot guys.
Jeff |
| Posts: 38 | Location: Madison | Registered: 26 September 2003 |
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| We gotta watch out for you new guys. We need more to join us in our forays of lube making, bullet designing, mass mold orders, and other such sane endeavors.
The next thing that will happen to you is very easily forseen. You will be walking through the woods. Looking down, you will find an old cartridge case for a rifle caliber you don't own, or maybe never even heard of. You will stick it in your pocket, and it will eventually migrate to yor reloading bench. In a couple monthes, you will pick it up, and look at it again. Unfortunately for you, you will go to a gun show sometime soon after that, and happen to see a rifle of that caliber. It will follow you home. You will then buy dies, and find they are rare or non-existant, and you will pay more than you did for the rifle.
Then you will need a bullet mold, and casting equipment, and lead, and before you know it, you'll wind up in Winnemucca, Nevada with a bunch of wild eyed cast bullet shooters, wondering whut the hell happened to you?] |
| Posts: 922 | Location: Somers, Montana | Registered: 23 May 2002 |
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| Waksupi, what makes YOU such an expert on this matter? Huh? {BSEG} sundog |
| Posts: 287 | Location: Koweta Mission, OK | Registered: 28 August 2001 |
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| If it makes any difference, the amount of lead you get from an automobile battery, is tiny, compared to the proportion of the work it takes. I have done a total of one! And thank goodness I didn't ruin a big melt with the paltry, useless results. They're right... It don't even make good bullets. Don't do it.>>>>>>>>>>Bug. |
| Posts: 353 | Location: East Texas | Registered: 22 January 2003 |
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| Waksupi, it's a disease and luckily there is no cure. Ed B |
| Posts: 363 | Location: Missouri Ozarks, USA | Registered: 10 July 2002 |
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| jpothof....I've done this and there's not enough lead in the plates to make it worth while and it's a mess what with all the chemicals etc.
You're better off hitting the guys at the local garage for WWs, the local telephone guy for old cable sheathing or a friendly plumber for salvage stuff that he pulls out./begale |
| Posts: 234 | Location: Lexington, Ky,USA | Registered: 26 January 2001 |
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| quote: Originally posted by waksupi: before you know it, you'll wind up in Winnemucca, Nevada with a bunch of wild eyed cast bullet shooters, wondering whut the hell happened to you?]
Actually it's not quite like that....It's more like you will wonder why you hadn't made the trip before 45nut |
| Posts: 538 | Location: elsewhere | Registered: 07 July 2001 |
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| Why, Sundog, I can't imagine what rifle(s) you would be referring to. Although I do recall a .303 Enfield that came home, because I had some ammo clips for one... and the 8mm milsurps that had to come home, after I figured out the clips for the Swedes would also work in them... and then there was...
Hello, my name is Waksupi, and I'm a gunaholic... |
| Posts: 922 | Location: Somers, Montana | Registered: 23 May 2002 |
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| Okay,
So this gun/reloading/shooting stuff is slightly addicting. Its too late for the warnings. At age twenty five I already have filled a 16 gun cabinet. I never shoot factory rounds anymore (except in my AR-15, and Slug gun) And I find that whenever my mind is not actively engaged with something else my thoughts float into how I can get such and such a bullet to do this in such and such a gun, and how much I want this or that gun/accessory.
Whenever I meet up with my hunting friends I always seem to be carrying something different, or a new handload, etc. I threw out the practical .30-06, .270, and things normal people get for more exotic calibers such as the 7mm STW. Not that I don't have the normal calibers, thats of course how I got this whole thing started.
Now I really don't have the money to be collecting all these toys. I'm a medical student, and unlike the doctors, I make -$35,000 a year. Despite this I always seem to find a way to add at least one new must have to the collection.
So, other than moving to nevada (Wisconsin has far better deer hunting) I think I'm already down the path. Funny they never mentioned this when they taught us about alcohol and drug addition in neurosciences.
Have Fun,
Jeff |
| Posts: 38 | Location: Madison | Registered: 26 September 2003 |
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| ..., or the rifle I built AFTER glooming onto one of the 358009 Improved custom moulds..., or the MOAS..., or group buys 6-banger moulds..., or, or, or.... Hmmm, I'm just now seeing a partern emerging. I THINK I LIKE IT! sundog |
| Posts: 287 | Location: Koweta Mission, OK | Registered: 28 August 2001 |
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| Geez, Jeff. $35000 puts you in the upper income bracket for Montana! I could live for about three years comfortably on one years salary. Remember me when you want to make a donation somewhere. I am the President and CEO of the "Save the Blue Clay Pigeon Foundation"! |
| Posts: 922 | Location: Somers, Montana | Registered: 23 May 2002 |
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| No, you read that totally wrong. That was -$35,000 a year. As in negative, in the red. AKA I have no income. |
| Posts: 38 | Location: Madison | Registered: 26 September 2003 |
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| Oh! So you DO live in Montana! |
| Posts: 922 | Location: Somers, Montana | Registered: 23 May 2002 |
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