- Location
- Quesnel B.C.
Ive got an 1895 marlin stainless. How in the hell are you guys feeding these things? Everywhere i look its 2 or 3 dollars a round.
The most expensive part of reloading for the 45-70 is the brass........but you can use it as long as you can find where it lands, don't have to look to hard when your feeding a single shot.......
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Are those painted or coated? Were they purchased that way? I'm surprised they don't leave residue in the barrel unless it's a lubricated bullet?
Some calibers with giant numbers of owners, have loss leader ammo sales. Thinking specifically of 9mm and 223. Hardly pays to tool up to reload.
Other calibers, any rifle over 30 cal, it is a necessity to reload. Should be able to get loads, even with good projectile for $1/cartridge. Cast, if you have a source for cheap lead is pennies.
Powder coated...the next evolution
cliff notes? why?
cliff notes? why?
No idea what a "cliff note" is.
Standard answer though; why not?
cliff note's is just a term for the short form answer.
why not? wasted time, effort and money?
essentially what is the benefit? vv's response seems to indicate it makes for better aerodynamics? why is polymer better than copper?
Powder coating is not a replacement for copper jacket, it’s a replacement for lube on cast bullets.cliff note's is just a term for the short form answer.
why not? wasted time, effort and money?
essentially what is the benefit? vv's response seems to indicate it makes for better aerodynamics? why is polymer better than copper?
Powder coating is not a replacement for copper jacket, it’s a replacement for lube on cast bullets.
This has certainly turned out to be an informative thread!
Does powder-coating produce consistent thickness of coating on the bullets? Interesting idea.




























