Subject line says it. Looking at a 223 build and no upper-end brass available anymore. What are people using these days?
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LC is always solid and plentiful
i also sell it, full processed, ready to roll if you want a bunch
Starline still makes the heavy brass, it is head stamped 223 Rem. It holds about 1.5gr less powder.I use Starline 5.56mm Brass with complete satisfaction. It is currently in stock.
#3440 - 5.56x45mm Brass (Small Rifle primer)
Years ago Starline brass was much heavier than say LC brass by several grains, and care had to be taken when swapping known safe LC loads into Starline 5.56 brass. Recent batch's of Starline 5.56mm brass, in the last 2 years weigh darned close to recent LC brass weights which is a good thing when working up your loads.
absolutelyI have probably 15k pieces of LC dating anywhere from the 70s to current production. Its all been decrimped and primer flashholes cleaned up, but thats all Ive ever done to it other than annealing every firing. It has served my ARs very well and I really only use it for stuff like 69gr bullets and heavier. One large benefit Ive found with LC, that even over 40+ years of production, it is really amazingly consistent.
I do have a 500 piece bag of Starline 5.56 headstamped brass (supposedly harder in the base) that I purchased for an upcoming 223 bolt rifle project I have coming up. Is it better than Lapua? Probably not. The real question is can my rifle and more importantly me, tell the difference on the target.
RWS rocks. It’s what black hills used and they know a thing or two about it. Lapua rocks too but costs 5x the Rws.If you can find RWS....
I run winchester for my gassers
and Hornady for bolt guns - yeah. But it works.
I save the Lapua and RWS I have on hand (about 800 of each) for when I mean business. Fortunately, I'm almost always in play mode these days