Tenshinai wrote:Nah, i generally leave that to the severe gun-nuts.
That would be a fair description of me. I've been shooting since I was 8, competing with, reloading and casting bullets for (with both black powder and smokeless) pre-1899 design firearms for about 25 years.
Tenshinai wrote:Fail. A cast lead bullet hitting steel will start to deform instantly on impact, as such the contact surface may effectively be that of the caliber of the bullet, or more, or less all depending on exact hardness of the metals involved and impact properties.
Actually, NOT a fail.
I was there- standing about 15 feet behind and to one side of the shooter in question when it happened (it happened at a match) and was one of the 3 range officers that went down range after the range was declared cold to inspect for possible damage. I saw the shot fired, saw the target shiver under the impact and saw the damage when the shooting string was completed and the range was safe for us to advance and make a closer inspection.
Tenshinai wrote:Yes, and the softer the bullet, the more energy will be lost while doing so.
One problem however is that only a fool would use hardmetal bullets in a pistol, as pistols are generally used at shorter range, and hardmetal bullets hitting metal can ricochet straight back at you with anything up to deadly results.
Quite right. I've been hit by cast bullets that were made of too hard an alloy that fragmented or just ricocheted back. I've got a scar on my right shin from a 250gr .45 Colt bullet some new guy made that was too hard that ended up coming back and hitting me.
Before you start categorically refuting, you may want to do some research into bullet casting and the lead alloys that can be easily made- and the resulting changes in hardness those alloys cause when used in bullets.
Pure (100%) lead is soft enough that it will 'splat' like you mentioned when it hits a hard surface. By adding small percentages of tin, antimony (called 'false silver' in the books) or a few other metals, you end up changing the hardness of the dramatically. Pure lead has a Brinell hardness of 5HB and lead alloys can measure up to 22HB.
Tenshinai wrote:1600fps is nothing extreme. The good old 1905 Mauser has a V0 at 2600-2700fps.
That's an apples and oranges comparison. Completely different projectile designs, completely different propellents. The 'M96' round designed my RFC in the books is at LEAST a generation- if not two- from the 8x57mm Mauser.
RFC's round is a large bore (.45") lead alloy gaschecked bullet propelled by black powder.
(Except for the gascheck, it would be contemporaneous to the .45-70 and the 577/450 Martini-Henry.)
The 8x57mm is a mid bore (.323")jacketed bullet propelled by smokeless powder.
(Which was part of the generation of cartridges that were designed to replace the .45-70's and 577/450's of the world.)
Tenshinai wrote:I have trouble agreeing with that. The link above gives a hint of what is needed to punch through armour reliably with a partially soft bullet, and even if the stated breastplates top out at a paltry 3mm, which is unlikely in an environment where firearms have begun to be used, soft and slow bullets will still have issues punching through three separate objects.
Again, you need to look into just how hard some of these lead alloys are and the increase in external hardness that quenching would give the bullet.
We're not talking about some soft lead ball that could have even been swaged from pure lead (some round ball projectiles are still swaged even today). Shooting something that soft at 1600fps would turn any rifle into a smoothbore in short order (pure lead rounds are normally kept below 1000fps @ the muzzle if you intend to keep leading to a minimum).
We are talking about a bullet that is designed to perform while being pushed fast enough to be pretty close to the upper edge of what you can do with a lead bullet without having the projectile melt as it goes down the barrel. If the new alloy's hardness is going to keep it from melting from just the friction of going down the barrel at that velocity, it will also have an impact on it's penetration ability against hard targets.
But don't take my word for it, you just go ahead.