- Thread starter
- #21
Joec7651
Handloader
- Apr 7, 2019
- 943
- 1,201
Here’s a video that explains it much better than I can.
https://youtu.be/5DsYhPLSUD8
I’ve gotten the same results from buying Hexagonal Boron Nitride itself. You don’t have to buy the kit for it to work. It also saves a little money when you simply buy the HBN.
Just a little fact about HBN. Speer coats their Gold Dot rifle bullets with HBN. The lead core is plated with copper, it’s not swaged into the jacket, which is why there are no separations of the jacket from the core with this bullet. The plating that makes up the jacket is pure copper. They coat them with HBN because the copper jacket fouled the bore in tests and produced too much friction which raise pressures when loading Gold Dot’s. HBN made them slicker, lowered pressures, and all but eliminated the copper fouling.
Federal Fusion bullets, made by Speer, are plated the same way. The difference is that the Fusion does not have the HBN coating. So they foul more and pressure can increase more quickly when working up Fusion loads.
https://youtu.be/5DsYhPLSUD8
I’ve gotten the same results from buying Hexagonal Boron Nitride itself. You don’t have to buy the kit for it to work. It also saves a little money when you simply buy the HBN.
Just a little fact about HBN. Speer coats their Gold Dot rifle bullets with HBN. The lead core is plated with copper, it’s not swaged into the jacket, which is why there are no separations of the jacket from the core with this bullet. The plating that makes up the jacket is pure copper. They coat them with HBN because the copper jacket fouled the bore in tests and produced too much friction which raise pressures when loading Gold Dot’s. HBN made them slicker, lowered pressures, and all but eliminated the copper fouling.
Federal Fusion bullets, made by Speer, are plated the same way. The difference is that the Fusion does not have the HBN coating. So they foul more and pressure can increase more quickly when working up Fusion loads.