|
Post by doninnh on Aug 14, 2024 10:23:38 GMT -5
Well: Brass is not the bottle neck, there is a chain of things if your trying to have enough to keep going, I recall the people in the Philippines were making bullets out of brass curtain rod with file work cause that's all they had at the time. Seems like it's going to take a lot of time to get a box of 100 at that rate. So how does one keep keep the supply fresh, I have some rounds loaded 60 years ago, Not many but only so much can be sent down range, And the older you get the harder it is to do a 100 out of a big bore. Have nice day Don K
|
|
markwell
.30 Stingray
Firearms resale value should be your children's problem
Posts: 354
|
Post by markwell on Aug 15, 2024 11:19:37 GMT -5
I too am a fan of the bucket approach for handgun rounds. Was jonesing over .38/.357 a while back but an old bud who used to be CO firearms instructor gave me a call to come get some as he was moving; the buckets were full of tumbled, once fired cases. I still have to sort them.
|
|
|
Post by kevshell on Aug 15, 2024 16:16:36 GMT -5
It depends on the cartridge for me. Harder to find stuff I have a lot. For example, 348 Winchester and 500 Wyoming - a lot. 44 mag - maybe 300 to 400 pieces as I don't shoot as much of that and it's typically more available. 454, 500L, 45 Colt, 32's would be 1500-2000+.
|
|