R. G. Robinett
New member
Randy, the article you're referring to is from the January 1985 issue of Prescision Shooting, page 16.
Dave Brennan prefaced the article with this quote:
" Editor's note: Jonas Hallgrimson was a vital part of the evolution of thought and logic that lead to the development of the Biehler and Astles dies. The B&A bullet-making dies were a great breakthrough in the development of accuracy; they were the fore-runner of todays dies....all of which trace their lineage to B&A.....their development was one of the landmarks of the sport".
Mr. Hallgrimson also included a copy of the B& A catalog, a page of which was included in the article.
Al, thank you for digging it up! It was even older than I thought! I 'loaned' all of my PS mags - from '83' through '93' to a scoundrel and never got them back . . . sometimes, the synapses allow 'firing' in, at least, the right direction! You bet I'd like a copy! Good shootin'!
RG
P.S. I posted this on a bullet swaging thread which is located on the benchrest forum - it's another link to HISTORY . . . and just about all one needs to know about bullet making 101.
Bullet making isn't 'rocket science': it's simply the common sense use of good tooling to convert lead-wire and excellent jackets into bullets. To learn the fundamentals of bullet making, one of the BEST reads remains the description, by Mike Walker and Emory Tooly, published in THE ACCURATE RIFLE, by Warren Page, Winchester Press, 1973, in chapter 11, The Supremely Accurate Bullet . . . some things haven't changed since Biehler & Astles, during the late 1940's, conceived the single cavity, 'swaging-up' process of bullet making. Keep 'em ON the X! RG
Dave Brennan prefaced the article with this quote:
" Editor's note: Jonas Hallgrimson was a vital part of the evolution of thought and logic that lead to the development of the Biehler and Astles dies. The B&A bullet-making dies were a great breakthrough in the development of accuracy; they were the fore-runner of todays dies....all of which trace their lineage to B&A.....their development was one of the landmarks of the sport".
Mr. Hallgrimson also included a copy of the B& A catalog, a page of which was included in the article.
Al, thank you for digging it up! It was even older than I thought! I 'loaned' all of my PS mags - from '83' through '93' to a scoundrel and never got them back . . . sometimes, the synapses allow 'firing' in, at least, the right direction! You bet I'd like a copy! Good shootin'!
RG
P.S. I posted this on a bullet swaging thread which is located on the benchrest forum - it's another link to HISTORY . . . and just about all one needs to know about bullet making 101.
Bullet making isn't 'rocket science': it's simply the common sense use of good tooling to convert lead-wire and excellent jackets into bullets. To learn the fundamentals of bullet making, one of the BEST reads remains the description, by Mike Walker and Emory Tooly, published in THE ACCURATE RIFLE, by Warren Page, Winchester Press, 1973, in chapter 11, The Supremely Accurate Bullet . . . some things haven't changed since Biehler & Astles, during the late 1940's, conceived the single cavity, 'swaging-up' process of bullet making. Keep 'em ON the X! RG
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