silverhawks
Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2008
- Messages
- 1,299
Anyone know of a place online where I can get a better price than $53 for a box of .30 carbine shells?
Any help would be much appreciated.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Anyone know of a place online where I can get a better price than $53 for a box of .30 carbine shells?
Any help would be much appreciated.
Try my local guy...http://www.usfaguns.com/
You should check out
http://www.gunbroker.com
It's like the e-bay of guns / ammo.
Their prices are decent sometimes, but always shop around.
I'll second this. GunBroker is my first stop for any weapons/ammunition online. I actually have a buying and selling account there.
I also keep a distant eye on ammoman.com sometimes ammoman has some blowout deals if you buy in bulk. (now is not one of those times)
I've been looking there as I JUST got my pistol and rifle permit here in NJ. Only problem is, it would appear from some of the prices that I could just buy a new pistol - based on some people's buy it now prices??
I think.
I have no idea what fair prices are since I'm stepping into this (I guess) at the worst possible time.
Apples and oranges.
Never mix up 'range time' ammo cost with "Main Battle Weapon" ammo
I kid you not when I say that EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW which you can get from a range, you can get on a .22 LR
I cannot possibly stress the point enough, to spend all, or almost all of your range time behind a .22 and only range with your MBR so you know the sights.
Choose your MBR based on it's expected mission and POST-SHTF ammo availability
Post SHTF we'll see a glut of .308 .45 .40 9mm and .223
Standard American stuff. Unless China comes over and brings it, Russian stuff will dry up.
Don't look at what's cheaper NOW, look at what will be available THEN
And for heaven's sake; don't blow your MBR ammo on the range! RANGE your MBR and that's it. Maybe learn some wind effect for good measure. That's mostly applied math -- just like ranging.
Do ALL your practice on a .22
If I say that 1000 times it won't be enough.
Someone works 400 rounds a week on the MBR, spends over $10,000 a year to practice.
Someone else works 200 rounds a week on the .22 and spends MAYBE $30 a year to practice.
Chances are the .22 shooter is a better shot. And that doesn't change when you put a MBR in his hands. You have to "listen harder" to the .22 And you have to work the problem better with wind and range. Maintaining all the fundamentals, are EASIER on a .22 and that locks you in the habit.
I don't care who you are, if you drive a .30 class boom-stick and drop hundreds of rounds a week, you will develop a buck and or a flinch at least on some level. You could spit thousands from a .22 without developing that bad habit.
Other than ranging and windage familiarization with your MBR...
Do ALL your practice on a .22
If I say that 1000 times it won't be enough. seriously