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The Range
Ammo & Reloading
Lead versus Plated bullets
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<blockquote data-quote="bambihunter" data-source="post: 3589339" data-attributes="member: 342"><p>Basically what HiredHand said. Also, due to that friction, lead will tend to stick and smear onto the barrel. That is largely what gas checks were to prevent. I can load my 10mm auto at ~75% power using plated bullets. I stick below that for all lead. Berry's state they can go higher, but I could see they were starting to deform and leading when pushed. I think they'd be perfect for slower rounds like .45 acp.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bambihunter, post: 3589339, member: 342"] Basically what HiredHand said. Also, due to that friction, lead will tend to stick and smear onto the barrel. That is largely what gas checks were to prevent. I can load my 10mm auto at ~75% power using plated bullets. I stick below that for all lead. Berry's state they can go higher, but I could see they were starting to deform and leading when pushed. I think they'd be perfect for slower rounds like .45 acp. [/QUOTE]
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Lead versus Plated bullets
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