This^^^^^. I have no stockpiles.
I do a load development project for each rifle I own, zero the rifles with the load, and then produce a reasonable amount of ammunition using those results. Like enough to sustain a day's practice at the range. IMHO, anything larger that what can be transported at any one time, without long notice and special means, could not serve me well in any 'real life' scenario.
For another thing, I don't like having ammunition around more than a year or so. I've found that bullets and case necks bond in actually pretty brief periods, making ES/SD numbers wildly dissimilar. Accuracy can go away with ammunition age.
I've had bullets that cannot be removed using a collet puller, in less than two weeks after production. I wonder if folks who experience pressure spikes, or worse, have ever considered such a situation.
Greg
I do a load development project for each rifle I own, zero the rifles with the load, and then produce a reasonable amount of ammunition using those results. Like enough to sustain a day's practice at the range. IMHO, anything larger that what can be transported at any one time, without long notice and special means, could not serve me well in any 'real life' scenario.
For another thing, I don't like having ammunition around more than a year or so. I've found that bullets and case necks bond in actually pretty brief periods, making ES/SD numbers wildly dissimilar. Accuracy can go away with ammunition age.
I've had bullets that cannot be removed using a collet puller, in less than two weeks after production. I wonder if folks who experience pressure spikes, or worse, have ever considered such a situation.
Greg