Recoil

TO ROLL ’EM OR NOT

Over just the last dozen years, ammunition prices have been as wild as a bucking bronco. They’ve ranged from dirt cheap (pre-Obama era) to paying a-dollar-a-shot for military surplus rifle rounds after Sandy Hook. Lately, prices have come down and appear to continue declining even as availability is on the upswing. In light of the changing price and availability dynamic, now’s a good time to look at the value proposition of rolling your own ammo.

There are more reasons to reload than saving money alone, so we’ll look at three common scenarios that bring shooters to the reloading bench: economy, performance, and necessity. We’ll cover the benefits of making your own 9mm FMJ rounds, 6.5 Creedmoor match ammo, and then something more obscure, 300 Ultra Mag hunting ammo.

Before we get too far along, let’s look at the cost of getting into a reloading setup.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Recoil

Recoil3 min read
HANDS-ON WITH SOME NEW & SHINY
From the very beginning, triggers in American AKs have kind of been a problem. The briefly imported Chinese guns could be OK, but many of the Romanian models copied the original full-auto trigger groups too closely and had trigger slap so bad you’d e
Recoil9 min read
Sealed Sights
Sealed reflex sights offer advantages over their open-top brethren. They’re more durable, far less likely to fog up from temperature changes, and the LED emitter itself is better protected from the elements. Until relatively recently they’ve remained
Recoil7 min read
Fightlite Mcr
While the AR-15 has been subject to just about every modification imaginable, the quest for a belt-fed version took longer to come to fruition than anyone imagined. Way back in 1998, rumors started circulating of an AR upper that could be fed from ei

Related