You may be able to weight sort the bullets would be my guess to what he was thinking.
Actually, I wasn't thinking of that at all, but it is a great idea! Thanks!
You may be able to weight sort the bullets would be my guess to what he was thinking.
At that point, why not just buy reloading components and handload premium projectiles for the same price?
... it will be the behaviour of the ball powder on ignition and run out of the bullet and loaded round that will create the majority of dispersion.
It would be interesting to see how this performs by comparing factory loads with some Mexican match - but just with pulling the 'rinco bullet and putting back a similar SMK or Hornady AMax.
....The only reason I can see to pull down factory ammo and make Mexican match is wanting to retain the crimped primer....
I hate to see those cute little bullets not realize their destiny... But seriously, I think it would still be cheaper. Even a rough sort discarding the top and bottom ten percent should improve things significantly.
Couldn't agree more. Need more data...
When factoring in the cost to buy the ammunition and time required to pull the bullets, measure the weight and diameter of the bullet and reload the projectiles, and the fact that you won't be getting near to the same accuracy from these reloads as you would from regular tuned handloads, is it worth it? I say no.
Norinco 223 ammo does not have crimped primers afaik.
Depends on if reloading is a job for you? It is not like I get paid to sit and watch TV on my couch otherwise....
...At the end you can get down to less than $.30/round and have it shoot better than this "Norinco Mexican Match". Not that it wouldn't be an interesting experiment to do up a few dozen rounds just to see what happens, but something practical, it is not.
I don't mind reloading... But to spend hours to get something that is only slightly better than Norc 5.56, I'll pass. I'd want match ammo for that sort of work. You figure $.30/bullet, $.05/primer, $.14/powder charge and brass is essentially free, you're looking at match grade ammo with a premium bullet for less than $.50/round. You can cut the projectile cost in half if you go with something like bulk Hornady 55gr FMJ, as well as several cents off the powder and primers if you go with bulk purchases of Surplus powder and non-match primers. At the end you can get down to less than $.30/round and have it shoot better than this "Norinco Mexican Match". Not that it wouldn't be an interesting experiment to do up a few dozen rounds just to see what happens, but something practical, it is not.
I don't know, I have never tried it. I am not the type of guy to dismiss something until I have tried it though! Maybe Alpining will do all grunt work on this....
Maybe. Maybe not. I wouldn't necessarily expect bulk Hornady fmj bullets to be that much better than the Norinco bullets, but that would be easy enough for anyone to confirm. Anyone have data on the bulk Hdy?
I'd be interested to see just how precise you could rebuild the ammo just by replacing the bullet and applying your desired crimp. Option one, replaced with quality commercial bullets (additional cost $.25/bullet). Option two, replaced with sorted Norinco bullets (a rough sort-by-weight adds say 5 seconds per bullet). Brass prep and powder metering take up a large majority of my reloading time, so both of these options would offer huge time savings over reloads starting from once-fired brass. And they might yield a useful "compromise load" (time+money cost/benefit). Or they might not. But it will almost surely come in somewhere between bulk Norinco/Federal ammunition and premium commercial ammunition.
I don't have an accuracy-oriented AR (irons), so it will be problematic for me to do a useful test. But who am I kidding... I'll probably try it anyway!![]()
I don't know, I have never tried it. I am not the type of guy to dismiss something until I have tried it though! Maybe Alpining will do all grunt work on this....
Maybe. Maybe not. I wouldn't necessarily expect bulk Hornady fmj bullets to be that much better than the Norinco bullets, but that would be easy enough for anyone to confirm. Anyone have data on the bulk Hdy?
Hornady 55gr FMJ projectiles are top notch for what they are. They shoot quite well.
Hornady .224 55 gr FMJ-BT with cannelure
Ballistic Coefficient (G1) 0.243
Sectional Density 0.157
Any measured weights or measured diameters?
I don't think I have any left that aren't loaded up, but I will look if someone else doesn't beat me to it.



























