Right now, bullets we need are available. If retailers have a healthy supply of bullets, there’s a good chance manufacturers have shelved inventory on hand ready to ship.
Supposing that the employees want regular work, bullets, like cars or clothes may start to stack up, for no reason involving a defect.
For us, a best case scenario regarding “blems” is that at least some of these bullets were liquidated to stabilize cash flow because a healthy supply of expensively packaged bullets sits, slowly browning, at a different price point, and perhaps reorders are slower than needed.
The worst case scenario for us would be that they don’t shoot because they really are problematic. The factory had some doubts about a run of bullets, and it blew them out as blems.
One thing is relatively clear, blems don’t get sold in small quantities, probably never less than 10,000 averaging triple that. If they are all alike, but a smidge off one spec on the cheat sheet taped to the press, then in my opinion, we may still be getting a deal, depends what the spec was, but, for example I’m not too concerned about all the bullets being a bit longer or a grain heavier than they were supposed to be (assuming heavies).
If they are old stock, or overexposed to air and developed a tinge, again that doesn’t really bother me, either, but it may be ample cause for segregation into the blems category.
Could I be disappointed in a blems order, even at the basement price, yes, but it hasn’t happened, while the same is not true of all the main run bullets I have used.
Not that I need them to disappear, but I’ll say that I’m either lucky in what I pick, or they just aren’t worse than the good end of main run, and they are better than the low end, which honestly, is why I’m very ok with prices I have paid overall.