Wow, that was a whack of info. Much thanks to all. It's because I'm debating which lever to commit to. I could easily buy a Marlin 39AS in 22LR, or a Henry in 22WMG, or a Henry 22 Lever frontier model 22LR etc, and I'd probably be very happy. BUT, I keep watching these damn videos of hickok45 on you tube doing demos of Marlins and Henrys, shooting colt .45 and 357, 45-70, and they just seem more funner!
22 ammo is so cheap, and I'm thinking it would be cost prohibitive shooting colt 45, but that's what I want the experience for, a real cowboy cartridge - like in the "olden days".
But a box of Winchester, 50 rounds of that stuff at Cabela's, 250 grain, is 32.75 bucks, including HST, or roughly 66 cents per round. Not bad.
It keeps looking more and more like 22LR, or at best 22WMG.
CCI 22WMR, 50 rounds at 21.45, including HST, and at about 43 cents per round is better, but not by much. It's almost worth paying the extra to shoot colt 45

"It keeps looking more and more like 22LR, or at best 22WMG."
Wow, that was a whack of info. Much thanks to all. It's because I'm debating which lever to commit to. I could easily buy a Marlin 39AS in 22LR, or a Henry in 22WMG, or a Henry 22 Lever frontier model 22LR etc, and I'd probably be very happy. BUT, I keep watching these damn videos of hickok45 on you tube doing demos of Marlins and Henrys, shooting colt .45 and 357, 45-70, and they just seem more funner!
22 ammo is so cheap, and I'm thinking it would be cost prohibitive shooting colt 45, but that's what I want the experience for, a real cowboy cartridge - like in the "olden days".
But a box of Winchester, 50 rounds of that stuff at Cabela's, 250 grain, is 32.75 bucks, including HST, or roughly 66 cents per round. Not bad.
It keeps looking more and more like 22LR, or at best 22WMG.
CCI 22WMR, 50 rounds at 21.45, including HST, and at about 43 cents per round is better, but not by much. It's almost worth paying the extra to shoot colt 45
The larger and more obscure the chambering , typically the greater the savings, and yes, it is cheaper.
Also add in, that the more precise the ammo, the greater the cost savings.
338LM match vs 338LM handloads. I can be almost exactly half on this one with $3 one time use new brass. When it is a savings of $3 or $4 each time you pull the trigger , a press and dies and scale can be paid off pretty quick.An expensive progressive to load 9mm , well that is certainly going to take longer.
- cost is approx. 1/3 of factory ammo.
- it's BETTER than factory, as it is (or should be) tuned to YOUR gun.
- you are shielded from ammo shortages, once you've laid in a good supply of components.
What's not to like?
This is absolutely true on a per round basis, but I shoot 150-500 rounds of 9mm per shooting session. When I shoot a large calibre rifle (none of which are even close to 338LM), I don't shoot anywhere near that many rifle round. When hunting it can be days between shots...
Same equipment can be used to reload both pistol and rifle rounds anyway. All the case prep stuff (including the tumbler) are usefull no matter what you reload even if you have multiple presses.
Wow, that was a whack of info. Much thanks to all. It's because I'm debating which lever to commit to. I could easily buy a Marlin 39AS in 22LR, or a Henry in 22WMG, or a Henry 22 Lever frontier model 22LR etc, and I'd probably be very happy. BUT, I keep watching these damn videos of hickok45 on you tube doing demos of Marlins and Henrys, shooting colt .45 and 357, 45-70, and they just seem more funner!
22 ammo is so cheap, and I'm thinking it would be cost prohibitive shooting colt 45, but that's what I want the experience for, a real cowboy cartridge - like in the "olden days".
But a box of Winchester, 50 rounds of that stuff at Cabela's, 250 grain, is 32.75 bucks, including HST, or roughly 66 cents per round. Not bad.
It keeps looking more and more like 22LR, or at best 22WMG.
CCI 22WMR, 50 rounds at 21.45, including HST, and at about 43 cents per round is better, but not by much. It's almost worth paying the extra to shoot colt 45
Personally, I'd agree that .22lr isn't nearly as much fun as center fire in a lever action. If it were me, I'd start out with a 22lr bolt action in the $200-300 range, and later go to a lever 30-30, 44 mag, or 45-70. Those are fun to shoot, but the ammo is much more expensive.
Hello guys. Very new here. I'm in the midst of getting the PAL returned to me, hopefully by June I can purchase my first rifle. I'm set on a lever action. I can always start with a .22LR lever, like a Marlin or a Henry, but, IF I wanted to look at larger caliber levers, such as the:
Marlin 1894 in 357/38 special
Marlin 1894 Lever in .44 Magnum
Henry Big Boy Lever in .357, .44, or .45 colt
STORE PRICING
20 rounds of 45-70 = $62.00 including HST, — $3 bucks per round
50 rounds of .45 colt = $70.00 including HST, — $1.40 per round
50 rounds of .44 rem-magnum = $60.00 including HST, — 1.20 per round
50 rounds of .357 magnum = $43.00 including HST, — 0.86 cents per round
Based on this pricing, does anyone have any "real" costs per round, or cost per 50 rounds, to give me an idea of how much cheaper you can make your own?
I called Cabela's today, and the man I spoke with at the hunting counter said, there are too many variables to be able to give an accurate cost per round / per 50 rounds. Cost of powder, brass shells unpolished vs polished etc. But, he said when he speaks to friends who reload for 9mm, they often can make the same number of rounds sold in a box, for half the price.
Basically, I'd like to know if there's a "more" cost effective larger round to make, comparing all the calibers mentioned above. Is the "half cost" ratio applicable to all of these calibers?
I'd LOVE to be able to shoot 45-70 on a regular basis, but at 3 bucks a round, it's prohibitive. How much lower than $3 can you get that round for if you make it yourself?
Much thanks.
I would go for a semi-automatic 22lr but I think he wants lever-action, not semi-auto or bolt-action.



























