Zinc plated steel balls, ±11mm in diameter, weighing in at 84.4 grains a piece.
Sports a visually pleasing sheen and supplied in a heavier duty plastic sealable bag (to keep the corrosion away)
We market these as slingshot ammunition, but can be repurposed for whatever. These balls have a smooth finish and will rotate freely in any desired direction, so long as there are assisting mechanical and/or gravitational forces - see the embedded video below.
That being said, these balls are also highly magnetic, so just keep in mind.
Otherwise, for slingshot purposes, feel free to use these against a non-ricochet surface. Just bear in mind that they can potentially be lethal, even from a ricochet shot. It goes w/out saying that we assume zero liability for the (mis)use of this product.
If you are handy with a CAD program, you can always 3d print your cast to make hot-glue sabots for something like the HDR50. Hot glue does stick easy to these steel balls. Just be sure, again, to shoot in a safe direction and shoot your HDR in its open power configuration, to maximize the range of those sabots, otherwise you'll sit with a bullet effective only for 10 meters
a Cool project done using steel bearings, can be seen here;
Zinc plated steel balls, ±11mm in diameter, weighing in at 84.4 grains a piece.
Sports a visually pleasing sheen and supplied in a heavier duty plastic sealable bag (to keep the corrosion away)
We market these as slingshot ammunition, but can be repurposed for whatever. These balls have a smooth finish and will rotate freely in any desired direction, so long as there are assisting mechanical and/or gravitational forces - see the embedded video below.
That being said, these balls are also highly magnetic, so just keep in mind.
Otherwise, for slingshot purposes, feel free to use these against a non-ricochet surface. Just bear in mind that they can potentially be lethal, even from a ricochet shot. It goes w/out saying that we assume zero liability for the (mis)use of this product.
If you are handy with a CAD program, you can always 3d print your cast to make hot-glue sabots for something like the HDR50. Hot glue does stick easy to these steel balls. Just be sure, again, to shoot in a safe direction and shoot your HDR in its open power configuration, to maximize the range of those sabots, otherwise you'll sit with a bullet effective only for 10 meters
a Cool project done using steel bearings, can be seen here;
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