Yes.
TMJ (Total Metal Jacket) bullets should be safe in a Glock with polygonal rifling. It IS fully jacketed ammo. Glocks do not do well with cast lead bullets.
The barrels of Glock pistols use a different style of rifling, known as polygonal rifling. When shooting cast bullets, this rifling will get smeared with lead (known as "leading up"), and the pistol becomes unsafe to shoot.
.40 S&W with JACKETED bullets. The polygonal rifling in a Glock does not mix well with lead bullets.
You can hand load, just no lead unjacketed bullets.
Sure...Use printers lead..its harder than wheelweights. Clean your barrell well after each shoot...
Speer Bullets sell ammunition for rifles and handguns. Bullets are available for different situations such as self-defense and hunting. They also sell plastic bullets, lead round balls and shot capsules.
Many times, lead dissolves into water and goes into the soil that way. This is why they banned lead bullets, people would shoot ducks and they would land in a pond or lake and poison it.
Technically, trap guns are shotguns that shoot shot shells that are filled with pellets. These are not "bullets" However, you can shoot "slugs" from a trap gun. Slugs are solid lead projectiles much like bullets. 12 ga. slugs are very powerful and can be used to hunt deer in many states.
Blue bullets are bullets are high quality Polymer Coated Lead Bullets.
Yes, may people use lead bullets for a variety of purposes.
Yes. Lead bullets do not wear out the rifling inside the barrel as fast as steel bullets. Still, many people use steel-jacketed bullets . . .
Bullets