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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Coating Bullets
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<blockquote data-quote="mtnboomer" data-source="post: 3018114" data-attributes="member: 32439"><p>Go to Harbor Freight and get a bottle of powder coating paint. Put some in a plastic butter tub add a few <u>unlubed and degreased</u> cast bullets and shake gently to coat. The fiction of the bullets and paint against the plastic tub should create enough of a static charge to cause the paint to stick to the bullets. Wearing plastic gloves, place the coated bullets on a metal sheet pan in a toaster oven <em>(<strong>DO NOT</strong> use sweetie pie's oven!)</em> and bake at around 450 degrees until the powder melts. Remove the bullets and let cool. If done correctly, the powder coating WILL NOT come off the bullets under any circumstances - even during impact.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mtnboomer, post: 3018114, member: 32439"] Go to Harbor Freight and get a bottle of powder coating paint. Put some in a plastic butter tub add a few [U]unlubed and degreased[/U] cast bullets and shake gently to coat. The fiction of the bullets and paint against the plastic tub should create enough of a static charge to cause the paint to stick to the bullets. Wearing plastic gloves, place the coated bullets on a metal sheet pan in a toaster oven [I]([B]DO NOT[/B] use sweetie pie's oven!)[/I] and bake at around 450 degrees until the powder melts. Remove the bullets and let cool. If done correctly, the powder coating WILL NOT come off the bullets under any circumstances - even during impact. [/QUOTE]
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