Brinell # / Material
5 / Pure lead
9 / Wheel weights
10 / 1:20 Tin/Lead
15 / Lyman #2 or 1:1 Lead/Linotype
22 / Linotype
My question is what alloy should a guy use for hunting?

George
You think?Tycer wrote:... I did not need the expansion.
It is excellent photos such as those that clearly illustrate the effectiveness of cast lead bullets. Thanks Tycer.Tycer wrote:Welcome.
There are two schools of thought here. And it's Ford vs Chevy among cast bullet shooters.
If you are going to punch through both lungs and the heart with every shot, caliber and bullet selection really don't matter, you'll have meat to eat.
If you are using a .2xx caliber and you want to take an offhand shot at a moving target the last day of the hunt, you want to make sure that bullet is going to punch through bone and into the vitals. I'd choose 21 BHN. I get 21 from water quenched WW+2% tin+small amount of magnum shot for antimony.
If you are using a big bore gun moving 350+ grain bullets, you'll smash bone and hit vitals just fine with 20:1 lead:tin or harder. Air cooled WW work just great. You might need a little tin if your mold won't fill out well, it reduces surface tension of the alloy.
Personally I'll stick to the harder ones for deer and elk to reduce meat damage. For me, a nice 3/4" or bigger hole that looks like an apple corer made it will bleed out the animal just fine.
Two pics for ya. The first one is a 35 caliber hardcast hole from a 207 grain bullet traveling 1850fps. That hole is 40+ inches long. The 150# deer fell over, got up ran 30 yards and expired. It was not a good shot and passed from just behind the right shoulder, breaking a rib and passing through the femur and out the left ham.
The second pic is of a 45 caliber air cooled WW mess from a 450 grain bullet moving 1675fps. That bullet went through both shoulders, destroying all edible meat in the shoulders, neck, and part of the onside rear quarter. Deer landed 6 feet from where she stood. I did not need the expansion.
44LVR wrote:Hey George! From Elma, huh? I'm a bit South and East of you in East Lewis County! Lotsa elk around here that I've taken with cast bullets. Have never went harder than straight WW's and sometimes as soft as 1 part tin to 16 parts pure lead. I've never recovered a bullet in almost 2 dozen elk. 100% penetration in all instances.
44