1peggy
AH veteran
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2011
- Messages
- 106
- Reaction score
- 118
- Location
- Wytheville, VA
- Hunted
- Spain, Germany, Zimbabwe, Zambia
My local gun shop handed me this flyer yesterday
Exactly this. Same thing goes for bullets, brass, and LRM primers.It has come down to the fact that if you reload and see the powder that you use sitting on a shelf you better buy it, not in 1 lb bottles but in the 5 or 8 lb jugs if they have them.
I missed out last fall on a 5 lb jug of my favorite powder but I still have a couple of pounds of it left. But if I see it again I'll pick it up.
I agree 100% but what choice do you have when your favorite powder is no longer an option?One problem with switching powders is that after you have built up loads for a certain powder you have to start all over with the new one and rebuild the load all over again. And you may find that you just can't get the accuracy with the new powder that you got out of the new one.
I agree 100% but what choice do you have when your favorite powder is no longer an option?
I am currently working on a 9.3x64 and a 10.75x68 so I know exactly where you are coming form when it comes to having an ample supply of brass.That is what I was saying in one of my post, forget about 1 lb bottles and think larger quantities, or even several 1 lb bottles. I haven't purchase a 1 lb bottle for my rifle powders in close to 20 years. I also would purchase primers by the 1000 when I saw what I needed.
It isn't quite likely that your favorite powder will be gone forever but you need to weather the storms that come along. Right now I'm stocking up on brass for the wildcats rounds that I shoot based on the 30-30 Winchester. I just got 1000 new brass just the other day.
A 30 and 357 Herrett and I just got a barrel for a 6mm-30 Waters for my Contender that I'm going to try out.@JimP
30-30W for wildcat... Just curious are you shooting 219 Donaldson Wasp.