Results 1 to 10 of 47

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Senior Member Aniest's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
    Location
    Edmonton & East Alberta
    Posts
    2,249
    Quote Originally Posted by akimiski View Post
    What’s the cost different between buying ammo vs reloading yourself? 25% saving or 50% or 75%?
    For me, tailoring the ammunition to the firearm and the animal hunted has always been the primary reason. I shoot 125grain, 168grain and 220 grain Sierra bullets hand loaded from the same .308 rifle and scope. It took a few years to get the right combination of primers, powders, bullet crimp and bullet seating depth to get the same windage (left-right) point of aim from every one. The 125grain and 168grain are about 1 MOA, while the 220 grain is about 6 MOA, but the 220's are for under 50 yard shots only.

    Which mean my second reason for hand loading: a unique, challenging and rewarding hobby could be practiced.

    Lastly has been cost. Reloading to save money is for when you are shooting a lot, in my opinion. A very lot. But that also requires the initial money to pay for expensive progressive presses that put you a half step below a small commercial reloading business. Calibers for competitions out of semi-automatic firearms like 12guage, 223, 308, 9mm, and a few other handgun calibers are the main ones, where you're expected weekend of competition (friendly and up to Pro) is 200 rounds of 12guage, 200 rounds of rifle and 400 rounds of handgun. Go to 6 competitions in a year and 6000 rounds of ammo gets expensive.
    Last edited by Aniest; 11-30-2022 at 09:50 PM.
    Anything and everything I post that is not a quote, link and/or attributable to another source is my personal opinion only and no entity(s) and/or person(s) can be held liable for it for any reason unless they are the author of said opinion, link, quote and/or attributable comment; and nothing I post may be shared, spread and/or quoted outside of this website without my legal authorization unless covered by the end user agreement, terms of use, policy and/or rules of this website.

  2. The Following User Liked This Post By Aniest

    ESnel (11-30-2022)

  3. #2
    Senior Member harbl_the_cat's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    West
    Posts
    11,267
    There's another dimension to reloading nobody mentions but everyone thinks about... the usefulness of reloading as a skill in the event of TEOTWAWKI... which for those of us who have been into guns and reloading for a while... has just happened.

    The idea being if there was every a truly apocalyptic "end of the world" kind of scenario, reloading would be one of the most valuable skills to have - especially if the grid fails and supply chains collapse.

    That was one thing I hadn't considered pre-COVID: having something to do when you're board as TSHTF.

    One of the things that kept me sane during the lockdowns and vaccine mandates was reloading... especially case prep.

    When you're not allowed to go out and do anything because you're not vaccinated, sorting 50k pieces of .223 brass by headstamp is a really good way to pass the time.

    I spent as much time just sorting brass as most people did watching Netflix, YouTube or going on TikTok during the lockdowns... It was time very well spent.
    "Father Time is undefeated. He's lost to nobody. Not even Mother Nature."

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •