I was curious how the hardness of my 45 BHN cast bullets compared to the hardness of jacketed bullets. Googling turned up a wide range of hardness numbers for copper or gilding metal. Some sources said as low as 35 BHN. If true, that would make my 45 BHN cast bullets stronger than a jacketed bullet ! That didn't seem right. :X
As always, it's best to test and measure stuff yourself rather than rely on internet experts. I didn't have a thick chunk of gilding metal handy but I did have a 30 caliber Barnes X bullet, supposedly made of copper or some soft copper alloy. So I sawed the nose off an X bullet, filed the cut halfway smooth, and ran a BHN test on my homemade tester. 7.9375 mm (5/16") indenter, 150 kg force applied for 30 seconds.
I used a cheap USB microscope to photograph the indentation along side a 100th's of an inch scale. GIMP's pixel measuring function was used to measure the indentation and compare it to the scale. The indentation turned out to be 0.0508” diameter, or 114 BHN. Conclusion: even my 45 BHN cast bullets are still significantly softer than a copper bullet. :(
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