mrcowboy
Well-known member
Any TC Triumph Muzzle parts.
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Not around here. And price varies by demand for said powder. The popular ones will stay high I bet. mtmuleyThey are. I saw a bunch of powder for sale the other day for $30 a pound. A year ago it was $45….
$55-60 around here, and options are limited. The silver lining is weatherby factory ammo seems reasonable now.Not around here. And price varies by demand for said powder. The popular ones will stay high I bet. mtmuley
Unless you’re talking pistol you’re gonna need a lot more than 8lbs of powder to go through 10k primers and bullets.That's hard to figure anymore. If an event like covid hits, ill "need" 2 years worth of components. That's about 10,000 primers, bullets and 8 lbs of powder. Seemed excessive to me 4 years ago, now seems necessary.
Yeah, mostly pistol. Those were numbers off of the top of my head, I shoot around 5000 pistol rounds a year, maybe 1000 rifle, most of which are 6.5 grendel, 29gr loads. I should log all of my shots over the next year, I'd like to know just how much I actually shootUnless you’re talking pistol you’re gonna need a lot more than 8lbs of powder to go through 10k primers and bullets.
Who invited this guy?Any TC Triumph Muzzle parts.
The Bergers will be great for trading. Then you could get some good bullets. mtmuleySince the first of the year I’ve bought 2 barrels, 20# of n570, 5000 215 primers and bought another 500 Berger 195 last week for 1,000 total.
I'll wait for prices to come down and buy what I need and nothing more.
I like your reasoning...I’ve worked in the retail sporting goods for about 25 years and have witnessed first hand the panic and hoarding that goes on during these unknown times. I’ve also seen many people who turn that into a side hustle and buy extra, simply to increase the price and re-sell, which only makes the problem worse for all.
I hate to see people be forced to stop their target practice and save it all for hunting because they are afraid of not being able to re-stock their supply.
Ammo lasts a very long time if stored properly, so use this time to slowly build your reserves. Buy an extra box or two every couple months, until you have what you consider a several year supply. For a fraction of what you spend on coffee, you can quickly build your supplies to where you don’t have to panic next time this happens — and it will happen again. Who knows, your children may thank you some day.
Remember the story of the turtle and the hare? Slow and steady wins the race.
If prices go down, I doubt it will be much in this current state of inflation we are in for all goods.
Two more bits of advice.
Don’t wait until ammo isn’t available to decide that you are going to get into reloading. If ammo isn’t available, neither are the components to load your own.
Also, consider getting a rifle caliber that may not be the absolute most popular, but will still get the job done. While hordes of people are looking for 30-06, 6.5 Creed, .308, etc, you may have a chance of finding .280 Rem. ammo, as an example. This doesn’t always work to your favor, but I’ve seen that scenario in the past work, plus it’s more fun to experiment with all the different calibers!