If you can hold them.Among the best ever, if not the THE best. Their gang moulds are the stuff dreams are made of.
Oh come on! They don't weigh an actual ton! I'll take the weight in exchange for temp uniformity and mould quality any day, to say nothing of ease of producing a large quantity of uniform bullets pretty darn fast.If you can hold them.
Mine is the trough type and it seems to help if you pour like I do- A 1 lb Rowell ladle, or a ho'made ladle that holds closer to 2 lbs, with the mould held over the edge of a pot that holds over 40lbs. Start at the downhill end and fill the cavities progressively as you head uphill, finishing with the rest of the ladles contents poured over the high end. Anything not staying on the sprue plate runs back into the pot. I am one for leaving a very large sprue puddle on most moulds. I have a few that want a pressure cast with ladle spout to sprue plate contact, but most like a honkin' big puddle.The H&G sprue plate on the top was made like a trough. This trough was purposeful for what was my question. Also, thanks for the great videos.
Unbelievable! How could it be?Mould guides are only useful on bottom pour pots.