Where to purchase Gas Check tool ?
First I'd like to thank you guys for advising me as to what moulds to to purchase for my 30:06. I posted on old CSP but don't know if I was in time to meet the deadline. So thanks again.
Someone mentioned making gas checks out of aluminum and had a web site listed or a name. If whoever posted this info still has it would you please post again. I meant to copy the post but it was gone when I went back.
Glad we have a sight to post again. I find it real user friendly. Hadn't tried phot's yet but will very shortley:sos:
john
Freechex/Freechex II gas check tool
This kit sold only thru/on E-Bay by a gentleman named Codarnell is a device that cuts/punches discs out of aluminum beverage cans or sheets of aluminum or other metals such as brass or copper, The discs are then formed into cups or gas checks. Beverage can aluminum is a bit thin...around .004-.005 and this is sometimes a loose fit to the bottom of the bullet. It can be remedied by a drop of krazy glue. Other users form two discs together which produces a check of approx .010 thickness which also brings the outside diameter up to the level of the lower bullet band and fits tighter. Some folks have come up with using roof-chimmney flashing, available in Lowes or Home Depot and it is reportedly .010 thick to start with and very economically priced. Aluminum "for sale" signs sold in Walmart also work. Brass and copper are readily available, but will cost more. Another source of thicker aluminum is a bottle used by Budweiser if one is interested in adding the cost of beer to the GC. The cost comparison to buying new gas checks from Hornady(who makes all commercial gas checks and Lyman who adds their "cut" to the Hornady price) or Lyman is incontestable. Depending on the size...the price is a major ripoff-in the $20-$30. range so investing in a Freechex kit for approximately $30 + postage; it will be recovered by you if you make approx 1000-1500 gas checks and you will forever be ahead after that. The punch in the Freechex kit is readily sharpened if necessary and the punch can be readily replaced as it is a standard hardware size/item. It is a slow system/process depending on the dexterity and perseverance of the operator, but well worth it. A mallet or hammer runs the process, but those folks with machine shop skills and some machinery have adapted the kit to work on a standard reloading press. The maker of the kit is a friendly and approachable guy who communicates and helps with advice if necessary. He can be contacted thru his E-Bay address. He does special order sizes.
Now about the subject of Aluminum Oxide. This compound when used as a coating in solid crystal form is an effective abrasive for grinding wheels and sandpaper, etc. BUT aluminum beverage cans are coated internally to resist liquids that have carbonic acid in them, such as soda etc., and have a paint or tarnishproof coatings on the outside. Anyone who took science in/at any level of school or high school chemistry learned that to have an oxide compound of anything formed, you have to have oxygen present/available. So no oxygen=no oxide! If you use chimmney flashing you can keep the discs or the formed checks in a pill bottle or small sealable plastic bag and whatever oxygen gets in at all will be infinitesmal in terms of oxide reaction. This means that it would take a lot of years to be able to be measured on an electron microscope much less be of any measurable effect on a steel rifle barrel after ten thousand++ shots. Nevertheless if you still believe otherwise you can always use copper or brass instead of aluminum. Just for the record I have been feeding a number of Garands, Springfields and 30-30's with gas checks made out of Aluminum from pop cans for quite awhile now and they are working as well as any commercially made copper ones that I ever used. The groups are good and the cost is almost non existent. Ok there is the time and labor, but nobody bats a thousand. Its your call. Good shooting. JC