Tag Archives: ammo shortage

The great experiment

Rock Island Armory 1911 GI Standard FS, Semi-automatic, 9mm, 5" Barrel,  10+1 Rounds - 721952, Semi-Automatic at Sportsman's Guide
Rock Island 1911 in 9mm is a smooth shooter. You reload some soft shooting rounds, say 850 fps, and its like shooting butter. Butter! Plus a 1911 just feels like a man gun.

A week ago rifle primers appeared on a store’s website I go to, Brownell’s. I’d heard you could use small rifle primers in place of small pistol. So I tried it. The gun blew up and my dog died! No just kidding. They worked great. The industry just won’t come out and give any guidance on the idea, so you’re reduced to chat boards on gun forums. The best I could pick up is that the primer ‘cup’ was slightly thicker on rifle primers to withstand the greater pressures. It wasn’t really clear if rifle primers had more “explosive” agent in them or not. There was a lot of talk about “backing off your load“. That seems rather silly to me as I don’t see how a primer is going to change X amount of powder and the force it delivers.

The only concern I had as I was loading them last night was what it might do to the flash hole (the hole into the case where the primer sits). But from checking spent factory cases and comparing them to the 20 test cases I’d fired with rifle primers, there was absolutely no difference in size or condition of the flash hole. So it looks like I’m good to go and didn’t waste my money buying a 1,000. The obvious question is why would you do it? Well when I haven’t seen a primer in 18 months, and you have no idea when you might see them again, you do things. Luckily this one worked out. In fact I don’t know when I’ve shot a smoother 9mm load. 3.5 grains of 244 Ball under a 124 gr FMJ for 940 fps.

Until these primers showed up at Brownell’s and Midway, I was seriously thinking of taking a gamble and ordering those Argentinian primers (Servicios) from Zinc Point outside of Houston, and paying $200 dollars for $100 dollars worth of primers. And not knowing if you would even get them! I was embarrassed for buying the amount I did. But considering you don’t know what the future holds, maybe it wasn’t such a bad idea. I’ve been in an ammo line outside a store before the doors open. Its not fun. Its not fun having to spend all that time making your own, but its a hell of a lot better than not having any at all. We have no idea what the situation is going to be 5 years from now. The several thousand primers I bought in 2012 after the last shortage, is what got me through this shortage. They sat on a shelf just fine for 9 years.

And the funniest thing about all this! Canada is swimming in primers! They’ll never SELL all the primers they have! What happened to all that free trade? Why aren’t they selling them to us? You know – NAFTA

[On a side note, the 9mm 115 gr FMJ, the ‘loaf of bread’ of ammo seems to have stabilized at $31.6 cents a round on Ammo Seek. Which is exactly double what best price was this time 2 years ago.]

Ain’t no arrow shortage

traditional archery

My gosh that’s fun! Archery’s changed a bit in 50 years. Commie compound bows were just coming onto the scene when I left. With sights, the ‘let off’, tuned bows, balanced arrows, you can be a pretty darn good shot with a compound. And frankly, that would probably be best to kill animals as humanely as possible.

But for just dinking around, traditional is a hoot and a holler. I can now (again) hit a 15 inch cube target at 30 yards (probably longer actually. I still don’t know how I aim. I think they call it “instinctual” shooting. Once you figure out a few things, like your screw in point can’t be any larger in diameter than your arrow (if you want to be able to pull it out of the backstop).

And that you should skip the target that if you miss it goes over an 80 foot ravine. And that yes you need the forearm guard. Yeah once you get a couple a kinks worked out, there’s not much more fun you can have then that. And as I was alluding to, there ain’t no damn arrow shortage! And you don’t have to clean your bow every time you shoot! And you get to reuse your arrows over, and over, and over! Screw you Remington, Winchester and Federal!

ZHANTYI Archery 100 Grain Points Screw-in Practices Tips Removable Arrowhead for Target Arrows Compatible for Compound Recurve Bow (12)
A more blunt target point vs a too sharp ‘field’ point that buries itself in the backstop

Oh, and they always tell you, “Don’t get too heavy of a draw weight!” What’s bad advice about that, is that within a couple of weeks your muscles get used to the motion, and you’ve already outgrown your brand new bow! Better to grow into one than grow out of it.