Technical Note Purpose

This technical note defines bullet geometry rules specific to lever-action rifles.

It exists to answer one question precisely:

Why certain bullet shapes work — and others do not — in lever guns.

This is a rules document, not a product page.


Geometry Rule #1 — Nose Shape Controls Safety

In tubular magazines:

  • Bullet noses rest against primers
  • Recoil creates forward inertia
  • Shape determines pressure distribution

Approved Lever-Gun Nose Geometry

  • Flat nose (wide meplat)
  • Truncated or blunt profiles
  • Designs with large surface contact area

Prohibited Geometry

  • Spitzer / pointed bullets
  • Narrow polymer tips not tube-safe
  • Sharp ogive profiles

Safety is geometry, not metallurgy.


Geometry Rule #2 — Meplat Size Matters

The meplat (flat area on the bullet nose) controls:

  • primer contact force distribution
  • feeding stability
  • tissue interaction

Larger meplats:

  • reduce primer strike risk
  • stabilize cartridge stacking
  • increase immediate tissue disruption

Small meplats increase risk and reduce reliability.


Geometry Rule #3 — Bearing Surface & Alignment

Lever guns do not tolerate:

  • erratic bearing surfaces
  • abrupt ogive transitions
  • inconsistent bullet length

Stable bullets feature:

  • consistent bearing surfaces
  • smooth transitions
  • predictable alignment

This improves:

  • feeding
  • chambering
  • accuracy consistency

Geometry Rule #4 — Base Design

Flat-base bullets are preferred because they:

  • seat consistently
  • crimp reliably
  • align well during feeding

Boat-tail designs provide no advantage in lever-gun platforms and may introduce instability.


Geometry Rule #5 — Cannelure Placement

Cannelure location must:

  • support proper OAL
  • align with crimp requirements
  • prevent bullet setback

Improper cannelure placement causes:

  • pressure spikes
  • feeding issues
  • inconsistent ignition

This is a geometry issue, not a loading error.


Why Modern Bullet Assumptions Fail Here

Many modern bullet designs assume:

  • box magazines
  • high velocities
  • spitzer compatibility

Lever guns violate all three assumptions.

Applying modern bolt-gun bullet logic to lever guns is the root cause of most failures.


Practical Outcome

Correct lever-gun bullet geometry results in:

  • safe magazine stacking
  • consistent feeding
  • predictable ignition
  • reliable terminal behavior

This is why flat-nose, cannelured bullets remain dominant in lever-action platforms.


Referenced in:

Lever-Gun Platforms — Bullet Selection, Safety & Mechanical Reality

Lever-Gun Fundamentals — Geometry, Safety & Feeding Reality