Re: Ammo costs
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Lt. Arclight</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> Please,pry your wallet open or give it a rest. You go to that many classes that don't allow reloads-then the enrollment fee, transportation,room and board might better be spent at your local range.
I've shot 500 rounds of 338LM,100 of 50BMG and 200 or so 308 since the 15th of November.I might be crippled-but I'm retired and shoot every chance I can get. PS: All that ammo was reloaded.All as good as what Lapua can provide.
The laws of supply and demand-generally result in HIGHER prices. They have responded. There was a time ammo sat on the shelf-now they can't even unload it and its sold. If you owned a sporting goods store would you sell ammo cheaper?
I couldn't care less how much it costs. If you have a passion to shoot-you'll find a way.If you think the prices of ammo are going to return to 2005 prices-I take it you don't follow any of this countries economic indicators. Get over it.
When I went to classes-the ammo is free when you ARE the instructor.
Thank God we can still SHOOT. </div></div>
Lighten up Francis. Who pissed in your cornflakes? He makes a simple post asking about the price of ammo and he gets a lecture on the virtues of reloading and if he doesn't want to pay the price he should give up shooting? Who here wouldn't like to be paying less and shooting more? I wish I had the time to load and shoot 800rnds of Lapua quality ammo since mid-Nov, but I havent had that opportunity. But don't jump down his throat for asking a reasonable question.
I have noticed the availability of ammunition in my area has improved quite a bit. Reloading components are, for the most part, available again. Some things are harder to come by. .380 is still hard to find, large rifle primers and large rifle magnum primers are sometimes available, but match primers are few and far between.
That being said, prices have only dropped slightly. I wouldn't expect see them go back to pre-election levels, but I think I would agree with msr that I would have expected them to go lower than where they seem to have settled.
Let's just hope there isnt a provision in the Health Care Bill taxing ammunition because bullets pose a heatlth risk through lead poisoning or some other nonsense.
- Loud