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Harvesting range lead and casings

Posted By: Feedinggrounds

Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/26/21 12:14 AM

Anyone harvest range lead? Mainly looking for soft lead for muzzle loading balls. I have 100# of plumbers lead, had a friend test it and he says its too hard. It would be perfect for hard cast pistol or rifle loads. I need to blend it down, I guess to make it usable for my front stuffers. Plan to cast small small batches, not the whole 100# may trade some off. Our range berms are sand, how deep should I plan to sift? I suppose I could just go dig but figured this has been done by somebody here.
Posted By: Jerry Jr.

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/26/21 12:41 AM

Plumbers lead is pure lead. The joints will be solder (probably 50/50). Did your friend say what the hardness was? If you can bend it easily it is pure.

If you are just using it for target practice what you have will work just fine (if it is in fact hard). I like 40-1 for my hunting balls tho. Holds together better than pure and still mushrooms well.

From the little I did with range lead it was harder than pure but softer than wheel weights. Unless someone else has mined the berm you should be able to pick many up off the ground. Most rifle bullets won't make it much more than 8"-10" or so into sand.
Posted By: trapperkeck

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/26/21 12:44 AM

I would guess, most range lead is pretty hard, unless it is all factory muzzleloader balls. Unless you plan to hunt with them, why not use the harder lead for target shooting and melt down a couple hundred car batteries for hunting lead? BTW, please don't infer that as a recommendation! eek
Posted By: GREENCOUNTYPETE

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/26/21 01:33 AM

plumbers lead is generally soft and good for muzzle loaders if you can easily scratch it with a thumb nail that is all you really need to know.

berm lead will be a mix , it depends a lot what people at your range shoot stuff in jackets is generally fairly soft , cast is fairly hard


a wheel barrow that you build a frame that fits over, with 1/4 inch hardware cloth, shovel some berm on the screen and shake it back and forth, scrape it back and forth most of your >22cal bullets will sit on top. if your lucky you find a pistol berm with lots of 45 slugs 230gr adds up faster than the little stuff.


how deep , you will figure that out when you dig , top 6-8 inches typically sometimes less if the rain washed away the sand , sometimes they re-pile the berms with an end loader and it is all mixed in , it all depends


bring lots of buckets you never fill them very far , they get heavy and a pair of gloves those thin knit with the dipped fingers and palms give some protection but make it easy to grab the bullets.
Posted By: Paul D. Heppner

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/26/21 12:24 PM

I mine the 10, 25, and 50 yard berms at my local club a couple times a year. It's a mix of deer slugs, cast bullets, jacketed, and lots of 22 slugs. For the most part after cleaning it up and turning into ingots it's good enough for most of my shooting (hand guns and a couple rifles). If I want or need to use something a little harder I just sweeten my mix up with a little lino-type, I have a lot of it. If needs be I'll add a small percentage of tin (pewter) to aid in mold fill out. For target and plinking the straight range lead works well for me in .38/.357, .44 spl/mag, .45 acp/auto rim, .357 max/rem, and 45-70. When it comes to hunting I harden the mix up just a little bit, never over bhn 15. As of late I have been going softer and powder coating which has been working out quite well. However I do miss the lube smoke keeping the skeeters at bay in the summer.
Posted By: Andrew Eastwood

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/27/21 01:28 AM

As several have said plumbing lead is usually soft. I have made many pounds of round ball for my muzzle loaders from lead pipe.

I also wouldn't get in any hurry to trade off your lead, 100 pounds isn't much. Making balls, bullets, and sinkers can become addictive once you get started. Before I had bullet molds Dad and I would make sinkers in the winter months. I have kept the tradition going with my own kids and have many buckets of sinkers and now bullets and balls squirreled away. Unless we are needing a particular item that is running low we just make ingots now when processing lead down, but I still squirrel away what I can. Lead is getting harder to find as the tire weights have gone away from lead and most lead pipes have been replaced by now, but some can still be found on occasion. We pick lead at our own shooting range and a local range once in a while, but we just get what is exposed after rains. Make sure you are in a well ventilated spot or outside and have fun.
I will add that them square buckets that nails come in are real nice for squirreling away sinkers and bullets. If full they are a little tough to move around, but they are tough, stack nicely, and the square shape saves space over round buckets.
Posted By: Flint Lock

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/27/21 01:44 AM

Wheel weights can also be used to make round balls.
Posted By: Feedinggrounds

Re: Harvesting range lead and casings - 04/27/21 10:58 PM

So a follow up to my O/P, I went back though my messages to my friend that tested the lead. He said it was tested with Staedtler pencils, getting a Birnell of 8 to 9. Giving it 25:1 lead/tin ratio.
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