The "Why are people just now..." (and OldSalty's post showing the .80 9mm pricing) made me curious about how y'all are moving forward in the current conditions. I like KIR's post about running the .40. That's been my move also seeing as I kept all my .40s when all my friends were consolidating into 9mm. I also just sprung for a G44 .22lr to practice with. I mean, who didn't take AJ's advice after the last ammo shortage and buy 1000s of .22. I also appreciate all of the comments about rolling your own ammo in this time as a way to stay ballistically solvent.
A couple of other plans I have been setting in motion:
1) fill in the gaps on any weapon systems that you don't have fully up-and-running (slings, holsters, magazines, lights, etc.) Make sure everything you have is how you want it.
2) Cull the herd. Sold an unreliable SAIGA and some unreliable BVAC ammo for great $$$ at this weekend's gun show. If you won't bet your life on it, do you need to keep it? Put the money back into the other ideas mentioned.
3) Focus on other gaps in your plan. Do you have the NV, armor, equipment carriage, comms that you want? I figure most of us, besides The German, have room for improvement there.
4) Make sure all your existing systems are zeroed, functional, and GTG and you know what ammunition, if any, they prefer. I've spent all summer going through every system I own doing just this. I found four suppressors with varying problems, two rifles with problems, and shot a fabulous group on a FAL I wrenched together a decade ago and never really bothered with. My notes on the FAL say that I haven't even shot it since 2011.
5) Sometimes just paying bitch-prices for stuff that I really want, because, in the end, there are people who have shit, and everybody else...Haven't quite jumped on your recommendation, Salty. I mean, there are bitch prices, and then there are BITCH PRICES.
What innovative ideas, actions, are working for you?
A couple of other plans I have been setting in motion:
1) fill in the gaps on any weapon systems that you don't have fully up-and-running (slings, holsters, magazines, lights, etc.) Make sure everything you have is how you want it.
2) Cull the herd. Sold an unreliable SAIGA and some unreliable BVAC ammo for great $$$ at this weekend's gun show. If you won't bet your life on it, do you need to keep it? Put the money back into the other ideas mentioned.
3) Focus on other gaps in your plan. Do you have the NV, armor, equipment carriage, comms that you want? I figure most of us, besides The German, have room for improvement there.
4) Make sure all your existing systems are zeroed, functional, and GTG and you know what ammunition, if any, they prefer. I've spent all summer going through every system I own doing just this. I found four suppressors with varying problems, two rifles with problems, and shot a fabulous group on a FAL I wrenched together a decade ago and never really bothered with. My notes on the FAL say that I haven't even shot it since 2011.
5) Sometimes just paying bitch-prices for stuff that I really want, because, in the end, there are people who have shit, and everybody else...Haven't quite jumped on your recommendation, Salty. I mean, there are bitch prices, and then there are BITCH PRICES.
What innovative ideas, actions, are working for you?