DWalt
Member
Small pistol primers are where the drought is now around here.
Then use small rifle. They work fine in handgun loads in my revolvers, have used them for many years.
Small pistol primers are where the drought is now around here.
Then use small rifle. They work fine in handgun loads in my revolvers, have used them for many years.
not sure why you guys have to buy in person.
online prices are better n it gets delivered to your door.
ups dropped off a case n it was too heavy for me to move.
no drought online. bulk is down, good stuff no so much but it's there.
Either my Walmart hasn't had 22 lately or I just don't look as much as I used to but I have seen it quite regularly in gander mountain, Cabelas, etc
And it will remain that high until we refuse to pay the inflated prices. Even though I don't like it I refuse to pay more than 5¢ a round. Even that is hard to swallow when we were paying only 2¢ a round just 7years ago before this false shortage began.How many of us would have ever thought that 50 rds of 22 would cost as much as 50 rds of 9mm?
The days of 2 cents a round of 22lr have gone the way 19 cents a gallon of gasoline. One just has to adapt or quit shooting.
I can still get mini mags at Academy or CCI SV's for $7.99/100. Wish I could pick up some 9mm at those prices but the prices today are in a sweet spot compared to the recent past for 9mm so when I have free cash I try and pick some up.
True, we do have to adapt.The days of 2 cents a round of 22lr have gone the way 19 cents a gallon of gasoline. One just has to adapt or quit shooting.
I seem to recall paying $7-$8 a brick for the cheapest bulk ammo in the late 70s- early 80s which equates to $20-$23 today
I for certain remember buying CCI MiniMags in 100 round boxes for $1.59 in the mid 70's. I can picture the boxes with the price tag on them in my head just as clear as day. The same thing is $10-$12 minimum today - when you can find them. That's a 6-7 fold increase. Definitely more than inflation at work there.
But the real measure isn't comparing today's price to 40 years ago, it's comparing today's price to 5 or 6 years ago - right before the shortage. Most of the increase has happened since then. Which I believe is exactly the intended consequence of creating the artificial shortage in the first place. Just my opinion.
Back then I only bought CCI SV and was paying $7-$7.50/100
Seven to seven-fifty per HUNDRED in the mid 70's?
WOW!
Were they gold-plated or something?!?
Or did you mean $7-$7.50 per BRICK (500)?
5 years ago [emoji14]