Does anyone else save rimfire brass ?

PeterJ

US Veteran
Joined
Jul 12, 2017
Messages
602
Reaction score
2,008
Location
Western Pa.
Over ten years ago My wife complained about the .22 brass lying in the gravel driveway where I shoot my .22"s. So I started picking them up and putting them into a 5 gallon bucket,,, no harder than bending over to pick up 9mm brass. So, the bucket is about full and I will take it to the recycler some day and get a few bucks and the wife is happy.
 
Register to hide this ad
I save all brass, damaged stuff goes into a 5 gal bucket, even have a cas shooting bud saving his junk brass for me to recycle. Why throw money away?
 
I save any brass incl .22.
I throw it all into my range bag. Then sort it out later. Keep what I need and throw the rest into 5gal buckets for the recycler trips.

It's amazing the amt of dud .22rf I find on the range lately (last few yrs actually) too.
Alot of that fires on a second try in a single shot rifle.
Nice for lazy plinking.
If it doesn't go, I pull the bullet, save it for the lead pile, dump the powder (if there is any!) and the brass goes in the bucket.

Like I got time for all this too.
 
I knew a guy that saved all his .22 brass and damaged brass from other cartridges and planned on melting it all down to make a bell. Never knew if he finished that project.
 
I always thought it’d be cool to melt it down into blocks. My neighbor melted some down to make a sledge hammer head and put a really nice hickory handle on it. It sits on his fireplace mantle. Pretty cool
 
You're not going to change your lifestyle by selling brass, but the last time I sold any, about a year-and-a-half ago, I had about 230 pounds and it brought $2 per pound. I don't know what the rate is today.
 
Last edited:
I've been saving brass for years . I shoot at two different ranges and there can be a fair bit left lying about . I usually get 3 or 4 of the 5 gallon pails filled a year. Depending on the price of brass I'll get $50 to $60 sometimes more per pail. The money goes into an envelope and pays for my membership dues and extra ammo .
 
I put down a blanket to catch my brass. If any .45 brass misses I will pick it up If I see it. Anything else stays on the ground and the brass miners who come around can have it. I am not going to hurt my back for a piece of .22.
 
I don't know what else to use empty coffee cans for except try to fill them with all my spent .22 cases.
 
Last edited:
I’m jealous that you can shoot at your house.
I was raised out in the country and we shot behind the house.
Always thought I would wind up with a place like that but it didn’t turn out that way!
 
Back
Top