Thanks for the offer but I will decline with an explanation.

Given that I have not particularly taken to the act of casting bullets as a desired recreational activity, I confine my interest to the single purpose of making enough really cheap bullets for snap shooting practice off-hand with reduced loads in order to tune up for elk season.

As opposed to obsessing (as Mr. Petrov admits to and seems the case with people that actually like casting bullets enough to willingly inhale brain-toxic amounts of lead), I pretty much settle for "good enough" with my lax standard being minute-of-pie-plate snap-shooting at 60 yards max under the aforementioned conditions. Not a lot of point for loads more accurate than you are, especially when simulating real world shooting conditions by straddling a wet saw-horse off-balance while wearing a wet paper grocery sack as a hat that covers my good eye while one of those cycling sprinklers run a goodly quantity of cold water down my neck ever 30 seconds or so.

Anyway, I cast 150 grainers from a Modern Bond M311-910 that was in $9 box-lot at an estate auction which also contained a Star luber all set up with a 310 sizer, about a gallon of some home-brew wax lube, and a life-time supply of 30 caliber gap caps. There was another box full of old dirty moulds and assorted sizers I could have had for 9 more dollars, but I figured why confuse myself or risk brain damage by an obsessive compulsion to figure out which bullet was best. Besides, changing sizers or bullets would have meant having to figure out how to get the Star timed to squirt lube in the right grooves, not to mention figuring which grooves were right in a different bullet in the first place. Sometimes happiness requires willful effort to maintain ignorance.

Anyway, I didn't recommend this mould to our poster because I had no reason to think he could ever find one and I can not recall using these bullets in a Krag (as opposed to an 06).