Don't bother trying to resell them. Most shotgun reloading revolves around the sub-gages, particularly 28 and 410, as it is justifiable financially. For the odd person that reloads 12 g, they prefer Winchester AA hulls.
I have no clue which hull is which,, what is low and what is high. I know diddly squat about reloading shotguns. Tbh I don't even own a shotgun, gonna use a friend's. I just hate to see perfectly good pistol/rifle brass that someone could reload be sent to the scrapyard, so I was just asking if it's the same thing for shotgun hulls.
Anyway we'll shoot 100 of these:
https://www.gotenda.com/shop/ammuni...-2-34-1-oz-hollow-point-rifled-slug-box-of-5/
Are those hulls worth their shipping cost for reloaders or they're like steel cases for pistol/rifle?
Yes... don't be a piece of SHYTE.
High brass vs low isn't the issue. Shotgun reloaders prefer one piece hulls, as opposed to hulls with separate bases. This is to avoid the possibility of hull separation during firing, and the catastrophy that can follow. Most hulls these days are two piece, even the high brass.
AT the price of reloading few do it for shot shells as store bought are the same cost.
Magnet test. If the metal (excluding the primer) is attracted to a magnet it is steel regardless of colour and not usually a candidate for reloading nowadays.
Some specific hulls such as Winchester AA and Remington Nitro 27 are one piece, if in doubt, cut a hull in half lengthwise with a hacksaw, internal construction is then easily seen.



























