Goose Cracker
AH enthusiast
Bullets, powder, primers, and brass will move into the cabinets when the new gun room is complete. Hiding in storage area currently.
Seriously, looking at some of your pictures I understand why we have component shortages...
I guess some of these stocked benches are volume shooters too. Pistol or target shooters who might use 100+ rounds a weekend .
I like to load 100 at a time for any cartridge if I can using a full box of primers neat.
I like to have 100 rounds of each ready to go if I want to use that rifle.
I might only burn up a few hundred per year but having the next years compnents on hand is handy, it gives me time to see what old stock prices I can find in my travels.
We are limited on powder quantities at home. It’s worksafe regulations I think more than firearms but Work Cover, or whatever state department have powers in their legislation and strict legislation regardless.
I read powder is a propellant not explosive but it’s deemed explosive for dangerous goods purposes.
I don’t see it being a big problem and I suspect you know more about the science than me, The laws are the problem. I know many shops are restricted to what they can keep in a commercial area or store. Individuals have restrictions for storage at home. A Victorian gunshop owner was pretty certain that they go to jail if they exceed storage approvals.Well, it doesn’t detonate so not really an explosive except perhaps under extreme conditions. Even with black powder it’s not so easy to shift from deflagration to detonation.
Seriously, looking at some of your pictures I understand why we have component shortages...
This is AH, not AA.Exactly why I didn't supply a picture of the insides of all my cabinets and ammo closet.
I thought admitting having 5 presses was bad enough....heck I even have 4 Lee hand primes
I don’t see it being a big problem and I suspect you know more about the science than me, The laws are the problem. I know many shops are restricted to what they can keep in a commercial area or store. Individuals have restrictions for storage at home. A Victorian gunshop owner was pretty certain that they go to jail if they exceed storage approvals.
I recall an article on whether or not it is an explosive. Probably in the SSAA publication. I’m pretty sure The shooter who wrote it simply stuck with the line that under legislation it is deemed an explosive and is packaged , labelled , stored. and transported as such.
I don’t think 4kg powder is any more dangerous than a 5 litre can of lawnmower fuel, given the amount of lawnmowers in Australia. I bet they both burn out quickly but with a mix of fuel and air in fuel can be powerful force. Used as intended both require ignition to do what they intended to do.
Not a mess to me, I'd say it's pretty damn awesome.
About 80 or so, only about 10 that I shoot a lot though. The Dillon handles all my pistol and AR loading. Single stage load handgun bigger than 44 mag and all bolt action/single shot cartridges.Not a mess to me, I'd say it's pretty damn awesome.
And I bet you know exactly where everything is.
Quick question...how many calibers do you reload for?
I heard this very thing from a buddy of mine last week.
I pointed out I didn't just start buying bullets, brass, powder and primers in Dec of 19. I had been buying my components for the last 45-50 years so of course I had a lot.