you can go surplus... 7.62x25 for pistol ends up being about 15 cents a round and I find it to be a bit 'snappier' than 9mm with less cost.
Thats what Ive done for now.
you can go surplus... 7.62x25 for pistol ends up being about 15 cents a round and I find it to be a bit 'snappier' than 9mm with less cost.
Depends on the dealer and the brand. Canada Ammo has Norinco ball for $280/1120 right now. Not match grade to be sure, but good for plinking and practice. Budget Shooter Supply has Wolf steel cased .223 for $315/1000 and it shoots well in my short ARs. Personally, I wouldn't pay over $400/1000 right now for .223, and it would have to be US or Euro brass cased, boxer primed ammo at that price.
At this point I don't have the time or interest to start reloading. Perhaps someday, but then there would be a cash outlay to buy all the equipment.
There is a lot of talk about saving the price of ammo by buying cheaper calibre guns and conversion kits so one can save money and get more range time.
But how is it that there is such a wide gap from .05 cents to about .25 cents with not much in between ? (And don't say reloading is the answer)
I am looking at stepping up from a 22 cal target rifle to a 223 because it was supposed to be so much cheaper, is it? (compared to what)
There is a gap in the pricing / product scale somewhere what am I missing..
Someone already addressed the reason for the price jump due to component cost between the two: Perhaps the question you are unintentionally asking "Why is there not a very popular 22 Hornet loaded with cast 40gr bullets?" It is because of popularity, and therefore availability that certain centerfire calibers are dirt cheap in relation to other centerfire calibers, but still the individual component factor trumps all. Seems a halfway round might be found in a 22 Hornet size, (if popularity caught on it could even be 25-20 or 32-20...) with more economical components... but everyone would have to buy it to prompt the gears of industry to churn out ammo: Surplus will retain the crown in the category you mention, until it runs out and China no longer takes up the slack.
I appreciate being able to shoot cheaper components, and with no recoil, the humble 22LR is still the caliber most pleasant to shoot, spur of the moment when company comes...training nephews/nieces or my own kids when they arrive, I will always shoot it most.
The thing is I can get that component costs have gone up but it appears that 223 is staying artificially high in comparisom to 9MM..
sorry, I missed that comparison. It hardly makes sense too, because a 9mm bullet weighs over twice that of the 223, granted the 223 will need a more significant jacket, powder cost difference is marginal, primers the same.
Availability? In response to threats of black rifle bans in the US, people scramble(d) to get them and lifetime stockpiles of ammo, where the 9mm although affected by that trend, was to a lesser degree; is the only reason I can think of.
How about this... has anyone thought of the cost of the brass for the casing? How about the additional tooling and effort to produce a necked case versus straight walled pistol calibers. How about packaging and shipping? Obviously the required packaging and volume of space for rifle cartridges is more than 9mm packaging and space.
I'm surprised that they havn't found something cheaper to produce than brass for the casings. There must be another suitable material out there.
There probably is a plastic today that would work, but I'm sure it would be no good after it was used once. I imagine they should be able to produce them a lot cheaper as well.
It wouldn't matter if it was cheaper, I'm sure 99% only reload to save money, or make ammo that unavailable commercially.
One alternative to factory ammo is factory reloads. Factory reloads of 9mm (using lead bullets) are less than $10. That is not much more than the cost of reloading.
How about this... has anyone thought of the cost of the brass for the casing? How about the additional tooling and effort to produce a necked case versus straight walled pistol calibers. How about packaging and shipping? Obviously the required packaging and volume of space for rifle cartridges is more than 9mm packaging and space.
I dont understand how its cheaper to reload, you need supplies and all that, how soon do you get your money back and also its alot of time to do it