I saved a LOT of mony buying from a commercial reloader (Custom Reloading Services) over the years. The prices were usually about 2/3'rds of the factory ammo prices for 9mm, and the quality is excellent. I only got into reloading myself recently so I could tailor my ammo for IPSC matches, but otherwise I would still be buying their stuff. I chrono'd some of their stuff along with some American Eagle to benchmark against my own reloads. The ammo from Custom Reloading Services actually had a smaller Avg Deviation then the American Eagle, and sadly much more consistent than mine. But I`m working on that 
no need to go hostile and insulting. I gave out my recommendation based on real world, practical experience. Nothing sketchy at all. On the other hand, what you just said "buy factory" will cost people more money.
When I said "shoot reload", I meant "buy reloaded ammo". not only as a common sense, 9mm is NOT worth reloading, but also when considering the labor cost(which many don't care/count), to me personally, it's not even worth reloading 40 and 45 unless I have the full auto loading with a few hundred to 1000-round/hour productivity. Right now I am buying very good reloaded ammo from a few different sites(they are the sponsors here). 40 and 45 are easier for me, 9mm is tougher but can be found(I am an extreme cheapstake who is looking for the cheapest). While factory ammo is generally good(not 100% though, remember the winchester batch issue popped up a while ago?), it's just too expensive. I haven't had any issue with the reload I bought, so I highly recommended it. Besides, in my club, all the club guns are using reload without any issue. So, I don't understand why while you encourage people to shoot more, you only tell them to buy factory ammo which is wasting money and eventually practice less.
Other than this, anything else "sketchy" in my post regarding the change kit or conversion barrel? Being in something much longer than others, it doesn't mean you would always be right and know more than others. I know that through my career in IT where things change every minute, sometimes new guys will know more than a seasoned IT manager. so I always tell myself to focus on the facts, rather than just looking at the mileage. I will leave it just like that.


















































