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Kartorbust

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I don't handload as it is, though it has been tempting to buy some brass colored paint, then go out and buy some Blazer 9mm aluminum cased ammo, just to screw with the brass rat boomers at the range.

Handloading has crossed my mind many times over the last few years. May wait until PSA gets their own powder facility running and get the reloading equipment then. Would have to get at least 2 books to cross reference every recipe. Since it would be for ARs, its different than say a bolt gun.
 

Hellion

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That’s what some might call a Fudd Gun, but I like Fudd Guns because they’re honest, unassuming and devoid of “tactical black plastic“ but they still work. I like seeing guns and other items that have been used so hard that parts broke and they were repaired with whatever was on hand. If you hadn’t told me that was a spoon, I might not have known at all. Is it real silver? 🤑

Edited to add: I think there was Savage, Stevens, Savage-Stevens, and we’re now back to Savage.

My pew pew question is, how in the heck does a .30-06 bullet fired at 150 yards into the side of a *deer’s neck* make a small dime-sized entry wound, no exit wound and creates almost no observable hydrostatic temporary wound cavity on entry?
 

Sparkwizard

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Look up the word SABOT.
I load .224 cal bullets into a plastic sabot and into 30-30 cases. The small bullet travels very fast, sometimes shredding itself in the target. Also, since the bullet in conained in a plastic cup, it never touches the rifling, thus cannot be traced to the rifle that fired it. The plastic sabot is segmented so it catches air and flies away from the projectile. I hope that answers your question.

My Savage was .222 over 20 ga. I wish I had kept that one.
 

Hellion

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This cheap little bag, with hard 1/4” bottom plate, easily holds five 25rd boxes of 12ga shotgun shells of the 2 3/4” variety. Pretty nifty, unassuming and it’s tactical incognito. 😎

Image 1381.jpeg


Of course loose rounds are the real way to go but then I’m sure you can fill it up til the handles snap.
 

Kartorbust

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This cheap little bag, with hard 1/4” bottom plate, easily holds five 25rd boxes of 12ga shotgun shells of the 2 3/4” variety. Pretty nifty, unassuming and it’s tactical incognito. 😎

View attachment 163364


Of course loose rounds are the real way to go but then I’m sure you can fill it up til the handles snap.
Keep the rounds in a box or if an ammo can fits, use that.
 

Hellion

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Keep the rounds in a box or if an ammo can fits, use that.

I do use cans for long term storage but for range duty, from car to shooting position, or ready-use shells for a trunk gun, the mechanic’s tool bag fits the bill. By the way, the HF knock-off M19A1 and M2A1 ammo cans are 👍👍. I compared them with my USGI originals and they’re heavier and use a slightly thicker gauge of wire on the handles and latches. That can be good or bad depending on your stance. Anyway, what folks are charging for USGI cans these days made me switch To the HF or Wallyworld versions.

Paul Harrell (R.I.P.) did a range test of old paper and plastic shotgun shells, bathed them in a tub of water for half an hour or more and shot like all of them. I’m not too concerned about improper storage (which is anything outside of a USGI can). 😉
 

Grizzlymi

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Yes, the HF ammo cans are great! Nice new rubber gasket/seal to boot!

They are also great for storage containers on mini bikes, go-karts, etc....
 
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