What are you looking for?

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Days of the really cheap ammo might be over, but I think that you are on the right track with your bulk 9mm ammo. I'm almost through 20 000 rounds of it and it has a failure rate similar to any factory loaded 9mm ammo that is sold in bulk. I've had plenty of factory fresh rounds that had backwards primers, wouldn't fit the chamber or were squibs. When you go through a few hundred thousand rounds of ammo per year, this happens. I like how your bulk 9mm is just in a box, no little boxes to deal with. Putting every round into a tray and then into a little box makes no sense to me for a person buying 1000+ rounds at a time. People buying factory reloads are doing it to save few bucks, nit get premium packaging.

The Norinco non corrosive 7.62x39 is great ammo, hope you can continue to bring it in. The LCW in the past was great ammo too, but I never had a failure with the Norinco stuff either. With so many SKS rifles in Canada, the appetite for x39 will not abate, and many of us love the non corrosive so we only have to clean our rifles every case or two.Hopefully that will still be in supply for reasonable prices. (Note I didn't say CHEAP, just reasonable)

The demand for CHEAP stuff (other than ammo that works good) can be a race to the bottom that ultimately nobody benefits from. Cheap guns that work are great. Cheap guns that don't work become a headache for consumers and sellers alike. I would rather have something affordable that works for a long time than something cheap that only last a little while. Good example was the DA Outlaw sxs shotguns vs the Huglu you recently brought to market.The Outlaw was a GREAT novelty gun, great for shooting a few hundred rounds per year, but not great for a hundred rounds per week. The Huglu look like they can stand the test of time and only a few bucks more.

^^This!

Maybe "cheap" ammo is gone, but quality ammo at a great price will always sell.

I've seen quality 9mm priced at $230/1000 as recently as 2 weeks ago. That's not that much more than it was back in 2012. If you can keep that in the stream, people will buy.
 
1) Cooey .20 gauge with the 3" chamber model 87 i think. 2) Winchester XTR 9422. 3) Replacement stock and forend for a Savage-Stevens model 620-P 12 gauge shotgun with top tang safety and poly choke.
 
It's a stretch but a QBZ-03, although I know previously the answer was no. However if it was sub $2000 I would be quite interested
 
I could use a couple of Prohibited sub $6000 Norinco knock off M249s, or PKMs in the sub $4000 range. I have permits if the price point is obtainable. This was roughly the price range last time I checked. Not exactly stocking items but maybe they can piggyback on a future order.
 
.38 special wad cutters. Target rounds. .38 .357. .44 special and .44 mag. at a reasonable cost. there must be a pile of these in Canada but seems no one actually sell any ammo that we can afford and usually has to be ordered in.
 
I'm looking for a 7.62x25 AR barrel. I doubt anyone else is but you could contemplate a run of uppers for range toys. They were all the rage in the US a while ago with a few small operations putting them together. People want pistol calibre carbines, that could be a decent option.
 
12-gauge auto-loader

.45 long slide, with laser sighting

Phased plasma rifle in the 40-watt range

Uzi nine millimeter
 
Any inexpensive and reliable 5.56 magazine-fed rifle or 9mm rifle.


Also, surplus handguns and police trade ins from countries that will sell them.
 
You'd figure a place with ammo in the name would have some 223/5.56 to choose from. Also get rid of your base 25 dollar shipping BS
 
5.45x39 available in better bulk prices would be awesome. Like the 750 round boxes that Wolf ammo seems to be shipped in, rather than per package of 30. Also, more of Wolf's 5.45 offerings. (60gr HP, 55gr HP etc...) And other manufacturers if possible, Barnaul has new production 1080 round spam cans of 5.45x39 available in the States.
 
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