Went to the range today to shoot some rounds from my new Nordic dedicated .22 cal upper, with a red dot that came in Friday.
man, that thing is a tack driver.
At the range we have containers for live rounds. If a live round is found, had misfires, etc, one can put the rounds in a container, and they will be properly disposed of.
Well, today, I checked the container at the 100 yd range finding 66 rounds of .223. Brand new Tula steel cased ammo locked into the plastic holders. I shook a couple and they have powder. I'm hoping they shoot.
My question is that at the same 100yd range, in the spent brass container, there was almost 200 rounds of .223 brass. I thought I'd hit the mother load, but noticed every one of them had a severely cracked neck.
I brought them home anyway to sell the brass, as I keep all junk brass in a bucket to sell, but wondered why they all had a cracked neck?
man, that thing is a tack driver.
At the range we have containers for live rounds. If a live round is found, had misfires, etc, one can put the rounds in a container, and they will be properly disposed of.
Well, today, I checked the container at the 100 yd range finding 66 rounds of .223. Brand new Tula steel cased ammo locked into the plastic holders. I shook a couple and they have powder. I'm hoping they shoot.
My question is that at the same 100yd range, in the spent brass container, there was almost 200 rounds of .223 brass. I thought I'd hit the mother load, but noticed every one of them had a severely cracked neck.
I brought them home anyway to sell the brass, as I keep all junk brass in a bucket to sell, but wondered why they all had a cracked neck?