Canadian eh!
Regular
I assume it is not on the approved list, but clearly it meets all the right kinds of specifications to be. It is not cheap but this kind of factory ammo is hard to come by.
h p://ggg-ammo.lt/musu-produkcija-ir-paslaugos/7-62x51-mm-nato-ball-soviniai
h p://ggg-ammo.lt/musu-produkcija-ir-paslaugos/5-56-x-45-mm-nato-ball-soviniai
2000 – GGG was officially established and registered to build up and assemble factory within next 18 months;
2001 – The first trial batch of 7.62×39 mm cartridges for AK-47 was manufactured;
2002 – The official beginning of the production of the ball rounds to be delivered to the customers;
2002 – An integrated quality assurance system acc. to ISO 9001 and 14001 standards was implemented;
2004 – GGG cartridges 5.56×45 mm and 7.62×51 mm were sent for the qualification at the NATO European Regional Tests Center;
2005 – GGG received the right to mark cartridges with the NATO interchangeability sign;
2006 – About 90 % of the annual production exported abroad;
2009 – GGG quality assurance system renewed according to the latest quality management system standards ISO 9001:2008 and 14001:2004;
2011 – GGG decided to finalize development of .308 WIN ammunition designs;
2012 – launching of the first batches of .308 WIN ammunition.
SGAMMO in the US just got these in and it looks great, well packaged in Ammo cans, Nato head stamps etc. The 7.62x51 at those prices should sell up here. The 5.56 is spendy but I think would still find a market.
Any importers care to comment on this?
h p://ggg-ammo.lt/musu-produkcija-ir-paslaugos/7-62x51-mm-nato-ball-soviniai
h p://ggg-ammo.lt/musu-produkcija-ir-paslaugos/5-56-x-45-mm-nato-ball-soviniai
2000 – GGG was officially established and registered to build up and assemble factory within next 18 months;
2001 – The first trial batch of 7.62×39 mm cartridges for AK-47 was manufactured;
2002 – The official beginning of the production of the ball rounds to be delivered to the customers;
2002 – An integrated quality assurance system acc. to ISO 9001 and 14001 standards was implemented;
2004 – GGG cartridges 5.56×45 mm and 7.62×51 mm were sent for the qualification at the NATO European Regional Tests Center;
2005 – GGG received the right to mark cartridges with the NATO interchangeability sign;
2006 – About 90 % of the annual production exported abroad;
2009 – GGG quality assurance system renewed according to the latest quality management system standards ISO 9001:2008 and 14001:2004;
2011 – GGG decided to finalize development of .308 WIN ammunition designs;
2012 – launching of the first batches of .308 WIN ammunition.
SGAMMO in the US just got these in and it looks great, well packaged in Ammo cans, Nato head stamps etc. The 7.62x51 at those prices should sell up here. The 5.56 is spendy but I think would still find a market.
Any importers care to comment on this?