Well said Bryan.
Sadly, we suffer from a Walmart mentality these days. Bottom line seems to override common sense.
OPCX6 isn't exagerating when he says he made an excellent bullet. I used to use his 200 gr swc in .45 and his 158gr .357 bullets. The weight was excellent. The lube was hard without being brittle. The sprue was perfect.
Then Excel Bullets started putting out bullets for a few bucks a box cheaper. The weights were all over the map. The lube was either soft, or missing. The sprues were non-existant, being sunk into the base of the bullet.
However, having a dumptruck millionaire father footing the bills, Marty could affort to sell his s**t cheaply, and (I believe) offer the stores better payment terms than I suspect OPCX6 could.
Ontario shooters lost a superior product by a few dollars a thousand.
My fear is that AIM could suffer the same fate.
Thank you, Dave, but Marty didn't 'put me out of business' as many people have assumed. I did. I had other things to do.
My payment terms for my gun shop customers were the best in the business; I put my prroducts on their shelves on consignment with an inventory, when they called for more they paid for what they had sold. This was Janets' idea and it worked great. Slow moving styles were reduced and fast movers increased accorrding to individual shops' sales patterns.
Marty was selling some, but mine were doing better, and business was good.
Many personal things were happening in my life, however, and I had lost the passion for IPSC that I came into the sport with ten years ago. It was time to move on. Without going into details we closed down the business, kept the equipment for a while then sold most of it. I went to find the meaning of life and after 16 years have decided to get back into shooting, albeit in a more limited way. As a super senior (it sucks to be getting old!) and a lot heavier, I won't be winning any IPSC matches , I'm no Mike Auger, but I can have fun and enjoy shooting and competing again. Now my spare time is mine and not for making bullets for others.
Now I am buying cast .45s, 200 swc from DRG, as I have run out of my old inventory. Kudos to Don Goodbrand, he makes good .45s, almost as good as mine

. I still have a good supply of 9's and 38 super left, however.
Have not tried Wolfs',but I hear they are good, just haven't seen any on the shelves to buy.
My last two Ballisti-Cast casters were sold to AIM at this years Provincials so I guess I will have to try some of those new-fangled plateds too.
I realize that the sport and the industry has changed a lot since I left, and that is O K. Life is the way it is because life is the way it is.
Again, I have no regrets whatsoever.
I hope my original post didn't sound bitter, that was not my intention, merely an observation.
Shooters today have changed more than I realized, and in my opinion, frequently putting economic self-interest ahead of the good of the sport and national pride, and the quality of the matches reflect that. So be it. Things change, usually not for the better.
Most of you will never know how good it was in the early 80s' to get into the sport in its' infancy in Canada. Pity. The joy we had with stock 1911 Colts in .45 acp(there were no clones then, no Norincos). There was only one 'division', run what you brung, winner take all. What fun we had going over walls, through doors and tunnels, shooting from the back of moving pick-ups amd the side door of vans, rescuing The Princess several times (thank you Jo Winkler), Three Brass Monkeys, discovering compensators and the very beginnings of race guns, watching Doc win his fifth national championship, John Shaw, Second Chance ,saturday 16:00 at Sharon, The Black Fly Open, ............................................................................
Others, like cannuck223, remember.
Dave, what is it they say about opinions.......?
O K, I'll be quiet now (unless I don't). I'm going to go play with my original single-port Colt .45 Wilson racegun and have some fun. Come and chat if you see me at a match, hat says 'NRA Life'.
Bryan Marino
