Walmart 9mm
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
Walmart 9mm
The Walmart close to home has been getting some Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 9mm ammo in recently. A 250 rd box is $72.97.
$14.50 seems to be decent , plus it's just plain hard to find these days. I have been shooting for about 15 years now and it's rather sad when I compare the days back then to today. I could go to the proshop and buy as much 9mm, 22lr, you name it, and just blast away. I remember shooting about 250 9mm, 100 45acp, 300 22lr all in one session. Those were the 'good ole days'.
- charlesb
- Master contributor
- Posts: 689
- Joined: Wed Feb 10, 2010 10:39 pm
- Location: Mountains of West Texas
These days when I take my rifles to the range, I seldom fire more than twenty rounds through each before heading back to the house.
An exception is the .223 bolt gun, it gets shot a lot more than the others.
All reloads, usually reduced loads at that. Since the reduced loads are accurate, and I'm just range shooting, I don't see any reason to use twice as much powder just for a louder bang.
The paper never knows the difference.
My .223 load for example is 12 grains of AA5744 pushing a 55 grn. Hornady V-Max at 2022 fps, .017" off of the lands.
I'm trying out different .224 bullets these days to see which one I might want to buy in bulk, to save a few more bucks.
I don't shoot my Hungarian Smith/Hi-Power hybrid 9mm very often at all, it's a self-defense gun and I already know how to shoot it, what to expect from it.
An exception is the .223 bolt gun, it gets shot a lot more than the others.
All reloads, usually reduced loads at that. Since the reduced loads are accurate, and I'm just range shooting, I don't see any reason to use twice as much powder just for a louder bang.
The paper never knows the difference.
My .223 load for example is 12 grains of AA5744 pushing a 55 grn. Hornady V-Max at 2022 fps, .017" off of the lands.
I'm trying out different .224 bullets these days to see which one I might want to buy in bulk, to save a few more bucks.
I don't shoot my Hungarian Smith/Hi-Power hybrid 9mm very often at all, it's a self-defense gun and I already know how to shoot it, what to expect from it.
With the IDPA targets I'm shooting center-of-mass instead of a small scoring ring on the bullseye targets, so I haven't even attempted to compare match loads to the bulk rounds. I can still put them in a 'fist' sized hole either way. To me, the IDPA stuff is just kicking back and relaxing to have some fun blasting away at the cardboard targets.
R,
Bullseye
R,
Bullseye