I may eventually cast some pointy-bullet (7mm, .30 cal) rifle bullets, but most likely will cast .357 and .44 for carbine loads, and .444 and .45-70 rifle loads. I'd like to come close to standard factory loads, but nothing especially hot. I might also even wind up casting for blackpowder, so lots of potential hardnesses of alloy I could need, but most likely, lots of stuff suitable for rifle loads as above.
The other factor is I may not really get into casting for some time, but would like to have at least enough 'lead' on hand that if times get hard I already have it on hand, and in case gubment wackos decide to ban it as hazardous.
My question is, with the various pure lead, and lead-tin and lead-tin-antimony alloys available, I wonder if it would be better to stock up on 'soft' alloy around Brinell 10, or even pure lead - or one of the Brinell 20+ alloys...? I assume I could either add the antimony/tin to the soft ones, or add plain lead to the hard ones, to get what I need.
OR - Would it be sensible to buy the hardest alloy I can find at a decent price, and a similar amount of pure lead, so that I could blend something in between 7mm Mag and .50 Muzzleloader down the road? Or would I be better off buying only the lead in quantity, and adding the tin and antimony separately with each batch?
(Probably if I were smart I'd just spend my money on a few-year's supply of good-quality cast bullets, already lubed, and gas-checks seated, but I never seem to do things the easy way...
