How about a gizmo that rolls over spent brass and also picks it up. No bending over, etc.
Make believe? ~ $40.How much are you selling your make believe invention for?
Be realistic in your expectations. Sometimes much more expensive equipment , such as "match" dies might shave a very slight amount off a 1.25 MOA rifle. Worth paying double or triple what a standard production die cost for that amount of consistency? If you are shooting an off the shelf production rifle, the manufacturer of the die knows advertising works. If your gun can't use the more expensive equipment to an advantage, why spend more? Add up the cost of "match " type powder measures, dies, length gauges, components, scales, and everything else available, and if your gun can't use it to your advantage, why pay for what you won't be getting?
Same camp here.Somewhat agree. But you might be surprised at what an off the shelf production rifle can do these days.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Somewhat agree. But you might be surprised at what an off the shelf production rifle can do these days.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yeah but you can only use that one if you have small nuts.
Maybe. My experience is that they don't work perfectly by a long shot. They're best on a flat, concrete range. Picking up brass off soft dirt is sort of a lost cause. But I tend to be terribly ham-handed so YMMV, of course.that would be handy even if you didn't reload and had a place to pick up brass
Maybe. My experience is that they don't work perfectly by a long shot. They're best on a flat, concrete range. Picking up brass off soft dirt is sort of a lost cause. But I tend to be terribly ham-handed so YMMV, of course.
I sold the patent, now I am a millionaire. LOLHow much are you selling your make believe invention for?
I sold the patent, now I am a millionaire. LOL
$250,000 is peanuts?Yet you're barely leaving anything to St. Jude.
$250,000 is peanuts?
Ace? Hardware?I've got two of the ones from Ace. Use them all the time on my range. We don't shoot on concrete. Grass or dirt.
There's a knack to using them. Once you have it figured out you can pick up a lot of brass with one.