texasmusic wrote:To you cast bullet guys:
How economical would it be to cast my own without a source of scrap lead? Is it something to look into for a low-volume reloader or keep buying the berry's bullets when I can?
Well, free lead helps a lot, but the math involved isn't rocket science and you could calculate it pretty easily.
For example, my most recent .45 ACP reloads using my own cast bullets cost me about $2.83 per hundred. That is because I was using primers at $20 per thousand ($2/hundred), and
Clays powder at $0.83 per hundred.
If I purchased Missouri Bullet Co's 200 gr LSWC bullets, they are about $80 per thousand, or $8 per hundred. That increases my reload cost to $10.83 per hundred.
Now, let's compare costs if I cast using purchased lead. A hundred bullets at 200 grains ea is 20,000 grains. There are 7,000 grains in a lb., so 20,0000/7,0000 = 2.86 lbs of lead. If you are paying $1/lb, those bullets cost you $2.86 per hundred, which is still a substantial savings over purchasing $8.00 per hundred from MBC.
You can compare that for any caliber and bullet weight. For example, 115 gr 9mm? A hundred rounds is 11500 grains or 1.64 lb = $1.64. Same bullets from MBC cost $5.90 per hundred.
Another example, 240 gr .44 Magnum. is 24000 grains per hundred = 3.43 lb = $3.43. Same bullet from MBC is $9.30 per hundred. Same lead 240 gr bullet from Hornady is $18.80 per hundred.