David Sinko
Member
I recently acquired a nice quantity of brass and bullets. Included was a fairly large amount of what appears to be once fired .30-06 brass. It's mostly military brass with headstamps that go back as far as 1940 and was clearly shot out of a Garand. It's deprimed (does not appear to be resized) and looks to have been cleaned by an unknown method. A few of them have some kind of white stuff growing in the primer pockets. Was this brass originally loaded with corrosive priming? Is it still good for reloading? I have and use brass from 1942 that's still going strong, but I personally pulled the bullets and deprimed them, so it was basically unfired brass. I'm just wondering if brass that was fired just once between 1940 and now is still good to load.
I also have a bunch of .308" 150 gr. FMJ made with a steel jacket and lead core. Out of the 500 or so that I have, I'd say that about 10% are defective in that they have only a partial core or no core at all. On some of them the core extends slightly below the base of the bullet. Each bullet has two cannelures that are close together. I'm wondering how these were made. Were the cores pressed in or poured? How can some of the jackets be only partially filled? I don't know if these bullets were pulled from loaded rounds or sold off to the public or what, but I'm surprised by the number of high rejects. And is it advisable to shoot these bullets out of a modern stainless steel barrel or a barrel that has been chrome lined without damaging the barrel?
Dave Sinko
I also have a bunch of .308" 150 gr. FMJ made with a steel jacket and lead core. Out of the 500 or so that I have, I'd say that about 10% are defective in that they have only a partial core or no core at all. On some of them the core extends slightly below the base of the bullet. Each bullet has two cannelures that are close together. I'm wondering how these were made. Were the cores pressed in or poured? How can some of the jackets be only partially filled? I don't know if these bullets were pulled from loaded rounds or sold off to the public or what, but I'm surprised by the number of high rejects. And is it advisable to shoot these bullets out of a modern stainless steel barrel or a barrel that has been chrome lined without damaging the barrel?
Dave Sinko