I also use that mold. I got a couple of 5 gallon buckets of new lead seals from my local electrical utility when they went to plastic seals for their billing meters. They are pure lead so that I know what I'm starting with when I make my bullet alloys. That was one of the molds I used to make bulk pure lead ingots.
LEO (retired)
Oathkeeper
NRA Life Member
C&R 03
U.S. Navy 1972-76
M14RA Coordinator Western Region.
mercman wrote:I got a couple of 5 gallon buckets of new lead seals from my local electrical utility when they went to plastic seals for their billing meters. They are pure lead so that I know what I'm starting with when I make my bullet alloys.
Yeah, right place at the right time! I see where the last lead foundry in the U.S. was forced to close their doors recently. That could bode ill for both reloaders and shooters.
mercman wrote:I see where the last lead foundry in the U.S. was forced to close their doors recently. That could bode ill for both reloaders and shooters.
Honestly, I don't see it, and I think everyone got their panties in a twist over nothing when that happened. Things governed by supply and demand always have a way of finding a natural balance. If there's a demand for lead, it'll get met one way or another. If supply or prices start to be a problem with existing sources, someone else will step in to make money off the market opportunity. Remember that whole "life finds a way" concept from Jurassic Park? The same principal applies to economics and trade.