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blemished bullets worth the money?

LCazador

Competitive shooter and reloader for 50 years+
Gold $$ Contributor
A shooting friend recently asked me this. I had an incident that happened to me a few years back after COVID. I bought some blemished 6mm varmint bullets and after seating a few I started getting some weird cartridge base to ogive measurements. After some serious head scratching and measuring a few bullets from that same lot I found the lot varied by as much as .040" in bullet base to ogive! Never would have thought about dimensions being a "blemish".
 
I have had mixed results but the problems are relatively rare.
I have had good results recently with Nosler RDFs "seconds".
I haven't noticed any variations in the RDF bullet OALs, or base to ogives lengths.
They might be a bit off OAL specs, but I find slight variations of 0.005 in bullets that are not seconds when I measure lot to lot.
A buddy bought some 'blemished' Sierra TMKs at a very good price and, when he got them, he found that they had cannelures. (TMKs don't have cannelures).
They shot pretty well so he was happy, but, wisely, didn't load anywhere near the cannelures.
 
The way I look at it, it depends on what you're doing with that caliber. For any of my rifles that shoot good and have a barrel life under 1500 rounds I like to only use known good bullets .
 
I have shot about 600 50 gr vmax blems from midway for fireforming. Dang things shoot better than any of my 53 gr vmax loads.
Kinda makes ya wonder if all that fire forming is doing you much good? :rolleyes:
I've also experienced the "phenomenon?" of burning up powder and bullets for the purpose of ironing out brass to achieve that sweet fit in the chamber, and realizing that the load and accuracy is plenty good for anything I'll be doing with that rifle. ;) jd
 
A shooting friend recently asked me this. I had an incident that happened to me a few years back after COVID. I bought some blemished 6mm varmint bullets and after seating a few I started getting some weird cartridge base to ogive measurements. After some serious head scratching and measuring a few bullets from that same lot I found the lot varied by as much as .040" in bullet base to ogive! Never would have thought about dimensions being a "blemish".
I ran into this issue sometime back with some regular run bullets. Found as much as .008 - .010 variations between bullets. Sent them back to the manuf. and they replaced them.
 
Kinda makes ya wonder if all that fire forming is doing you much good? :rolleyes:
I've also experienced the "phenomenon?" of burning up powder and bullets for the purpose of ironing out brass to achieve that sweet fit in the chamber, and realizing that the load and accuracy is plenty good for anything I'll be doing with that rifle. ;) jd
Its a 223 AI. If I tried to stuff 26.5 gr of n133 into a 223 case, I think it would flow out onto the floor and then blow my face off....
 
Seconds can also come from machines being changed over from one bullet to another. The setup does create various ogive lengths, as it is very similar to adjusting a full-length sizing die. Point up on Spitzer-type bullets is another issue with some lead bleed out.

Years ago, at Sierra, they would segregate all bullets made on one machine as a lot#. The bean counters took over, and several machines were combined with a specific tolerance between all machines to save money. Dies wear, so different machines will have that as an issue also. Cheap labor becomes another issue, causing issues.
 
The only "Blems" I have tried were some 6mm, 80-grain Nosler varmint bullets I picked up several years ago. Bought 400 if I recall. Real good price and they shoot nearly as well as the Hornady 75-grain VMAX my rifle prefers. Only blemish was some discoloration. Wish I had purchased more of them.
Bullets with other issues such as scratches or other damage I would avoid.
 
When it’s all said and done, precision is about the bullet hitting the correct spot. Variables throw a monkey wrench into the equation. I’m out on the blem thing since the definition seems to have changed to “anything from cosmetic to total reject”
 

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