Barrel leading is the most common complaint from cast bullet shooters. Lead deposits build up in the rifling, accuracy degrades, and cleaning becomes a chore. The good news: leading is almost always preventable. It's a symptom, not an inevitability. This guide covers every major cause and fix.
The Four Causes of Leading
Nearly every leading problem traces back to one of four root causes:
- Alloy too soft for the velocity
- Bullet undersized for the bore
- Insufficient or wrong lubrication
- Velocity too high for the alloy and bullet combination
Diagnose which applies to your situation before reaching for a solution. Most cases involve more than one factor.
Diagnosing Your Leading Pattern
| Leading Location | Most Likely Cause |
|---|---|
| At the forcing cone (revolver) | Undersized bullets jumping the gap |
| First few inches of barrel | Alloy too soft, gas cutting the base |
| Throughout the bore | Undersized bullet not engaging rifling |
| At the muzzle | Bullet tumbling, poor fit, or no gas check on rifle |
| Consistent streaks | Lubrication failure or uneven lube application |
Fix 1: Harden Your Alloy
This is the most common fix. If you're running wheel weight alloy at 1,300+ fps and seeing leading, you've exceeded what that alloy can handle. Move to Lyman #2 (15 BHN) or heat-treat your wheel weights to push them to 18–22 BHN. Match alloy hardness to velocity using this rough guide:
- Under 1,000 fps — wheel weight or softer is fine
- 1,000–1,200 fps — wheel weight minimum
- 1,200–1,500 fps — Lyman #2 or equivalent
- 1,500–2,000 fps — heat-treated wheel weights or linotype + gas check
- Over 2,000 fps — linotype minimum + gas check
Fix 2: Size Your Bullets Correctly
An undersized bullet is one of the most overlooked causes of leading. If the bullet doesn't fill the bore, gas blows past it, melting and stripping lead from the bearing surface. The standard recommendation is to size .001" over groove diameter. Slug your barrel — push a soft lead ball through with a rod and measure it — and size accordingly.
Revolver cylinder throats: In revolvers, the cylinder throat diameter often matters more than the barrel. If the throats are tighter than the barrel's groove diameter, the bullet gets swaged down before it even reaches the barrel, creating a gas seal problem. Measure your throats and size bullets to match or slightly exceed them.
Fix 3: Improve Your Lubrication
Cast bullet lubricant does two jobs: reduces friction between bullet and bore, and provides a gas seal that supplements the bullet's fit. If your lube is inadequate, leading follows. Key points:
- Use a lube appropriate for your velocity — soft lubes work for low velocities, harder lubes for higher velocities
- Make sure lube grooves are completely filled — not partially applied
- Store lubed bullets in a cool location; soft lubes can migrate out of grooves in heat
- Pan lube versus pressure lube matters — pressure lubricating with a lubricator-sizer produces more consistent lube application
Fix 4: Reduce Velocity
Sometimes the right fix is simply to reduce your load. A 10% reduction in velocity can dramatically reduce leading and often has minimal impact on practical accuracy at handgun ranges. Many cast bullet shooters deliberately run mid-range loads for exactly this reason — less leading, less recoil, and nearly identical accuracy at 25–50 yards.
Removing Existing Leading
Once you have leading, get rid of it before it gets worse. Methods in order of preference:
- Lead-Away cloth — The fastest method. Wrap around a patch or bore brush and run through the barrel.
- Lewis Lead Remover — A specialized tool that presses brass screen against the bore to scrub lead out.
- Chore Boy copper scrubbing pad wrapped on a jag — Budget version of the above. Effective on moderate leading.
- Mercury-free lead solvent — Chemicals like Shooter's Choice Lead Remover dissolve lead deposits. Useful for severe cases.
Consistent Bullets, Less Leading
Automated casting produces more uniform bullets with consistent diameter and weight — two of the biggest factors in preventing leading. See the M2R Machine.