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Pretty good price...
On Friday, January 2, 2015 10:44:43 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On 2 Jan 2015 17:25:25 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Might have been cabelas...but it expired. There's wolf gold out there for 27 or 28 cents...brass and non steel bullets...as good as the 55 grain federal. Not Russian wolf. I just pulled a Tula 9mm round apart. The jacket is some ferrous metal but it is pretty soft and I got no sparks with a Dremel tool when I cut the jacket open. The core seems to be lead. The case was Berdan primed and full of some disk type powder. I can see that this might wear a bore faster than regular gilding metal but I am not sure how much that would actually be. I see no issue with "sparks" or other things that might make it more dangerous in a range, inside or out. I have never heard them say a thing at our range (outside) and I see a lot of those OD steel cases laying around. Maybe thinking about the green-tipped steel core penetrator rounds, also know as M855? The indoor range near me doesn't allow them. The outdoor range I belong to doesn't care. |
Pretty good price...
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Pretty good price...
On Thursday, January 1, 2015 11:14:24 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 10:53:37 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 07:39:30 -0500, Poquito Loco wrote: Yup. Can't use the Tula stuff at my range Why not? They don't allow bullets with steel therein. Sparks. That's their story, and they're sticking to it. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_Ammunition (Same factory makes Tula and Wolf) Steel-jacketed bullets[edit] In addition to using steel casing, certain types of Wolf rifle cartridges use steel-jacketed bullets, which are often copper-plated and cosmetically similar to standard copper-jacketed bullets. The copper exterior of the bullet is approximately .005 inch thick, with an underlying steel jacket of about 1/32 inch thick. This type of ammunition is labeled "bimetal". Indoor shooting ranges, which use backstops often constructed of steel, have accordingly widely prohibited steel-jacketed and bimetal ammunition to prevent shooters from damaging their backstops (as well as steel to steel contact from the round causing sparks, which in just the right environment could ignite unburnt powder residue in the air). |
Pretty good price...
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Pretty good price...
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Pretty good price...
On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 04:29:08 -0800 (PST), wrote:
On Thursday, January 1, 2015 11:14:24 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote: On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 10:53:37 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 07:39:30 -0500, Poquito Loco wrote: Yup. Can't use the Tula stuff at my range Why not? They don't allow bullets with steel therein. Sparks. That's their story, and they're sticking to it. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_Ammunition (Same factory makes Tula and Wolf) Steel-jacketed bullets[edit] In addition to using steel casing, certain types of Wolf rifle cartridges use steel-jacketed bullets, which are often copper-plated and cosmetically similar to standard copper-jacketed bullets. The copper exterior of the bullet is approximately .005 inch thick, with an underlying steel jacket of about 1/32 inch thick. This type of ammunition is labeled "bimetal". Indoor shooting ranges, which use backstops often constructed of steel, have accordingly widely prohibited steel-jacketed and bimetal ammunition to prevent shooters from damaging their backstops (as well as steel to steel contact from the round causing sparks, which in just the right environment could ignite unburnt powder residue in the air). Thank you, Dilbir. |
Pretty good price...
On Saturday, January 3, 2015 9:03:14 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Sat, 3 Jan 2015 04:29:08 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Thursday, January 1, 2015 11:14:24 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote: On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 10:53:37 -0500, wrote: On Thu, 01 Jan 2015 07:39:30 -0500, Poquito Loco wrote: Yup. Can't use the Tula stuff at my range Why not? They don't allow bullets with steel therein. Sparks. That's their story, and they're sticking to it. From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolf_Ammunition (Same factory makes Tula and Wolf) Steel-jacketed bullets[edit] In addition to using steel casing, certain types of Wolf rifle cartridges use steel-jacketed bullets, which are often copper-plated and cosmetically similar to standard copper-jacketed bullets. The copper exterior of the bullet is approximately .005 inch thick, with an underlying steel jacket of about 1/32 inch thick. This type of ammunition is labeled "bimetal". Indoor shooting ranges, which use backstops often constructed of steel, have accordingly widely prohibited steel-jacketed and bimetal ammunition to prevent shooters from damaging their backstops (as well as steel to steel contact from the round causing sparks, which in just the right environment could ignite unburnt powder residue in the air). Thank you, Dilbir. Dilbir? You can call me Jack. |
Pretty good price...
I agree with the outdoor range not caring. Mine doesn't either. I have a 600 acre farm. Where anything legal goes!
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Pretty good price...
On 1/3/2015 8:56 AM, Poquito Loco wrote:
On Fri, 02 Jan 2015 22:44:36 -0500, wrote: On 2 Jan 2015 17:25:25 GMT, Keyser Söze wrote: Might have been cabelas...but it expired. There's wolf gold out there for 27 or 28 cents...brass and non steel bullets...as good as the 55 grain federal. Not Russian wolf. I just pulled a Tula 9mm round apart. The jacket is some ferrous metal but it is pretty soft and I got no sparks with a Dremel tool when I cut the jacket open. The core seems to be lead. The case was Berdan primed and full of some disk type powder. I can see that this might wear a bore faster than regular gilding metal but I am not sure how much that would actually be. I see no issue with "sparks" or other things that might make it more dangerous in a range, inside or out. I have never heard them say a thing at our range (outside) and I see a lot of those OD steel cases laying around. The range I'm speaking of is indoor. My SIL shoots at an outdoor range, and they don't give a **** - like the honey badger. This whole sparks down range thing because of residual powder in the air is got me thinking... if there is enought powder down range, how much is in the air at the firing line where there are lots of sparks in the air? |
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