It's here guys. Graf's and Kaltron have received their first shipment of Lapua 260 remington brass and are filling backorders now. First shipments from Graf's should go out tomorrow.
JimT said:Kevin:
Can you explain why Lapua .260 Remington brass sells for 33% more than Lapua .308 Winchester brass (Grafs, the differential is even larger at other vendors)? I could understand it there was substantial tooling, production, or development costs but the only difference in these 2 cases is the neck diameter. I just don't get it.
Jim
jonbearman said:Since all my other lapua cases do so well I will buy it for whatever they want.Lapua is the finest,longest lasting brass on the market,so in the long run since it usually lasts longer than lets say remingto it is cheaper in the long run.You dont have to sort it so much as other brass either.I want some,LOL
DocEd, I couldn't agree with you more, people ask and they received. The price will come down on the .260 eventually I would imagine but even if it doesn't your time is worth something and there is a lot of work in necking up or down and turning. I don't shoot a .260 but if I did I wouldn't hesitate buying the Lapua. I think part of the reason weDocEd said:I don't understand how anyone can expect a company to produce a product, that a good dozen people on this forum, have been clammering for, and sell it cheap. The price of metals has skyrocketed in the past several years. I make bullets and can tell you that J4 jackets have doubled in price since 2000. I also make stainless, telescoping windflag stands. The stainles tubing, rod and bar stock, that I use, has tripled since the early '90's.
I commend Lapua for producing a superior product and, listening to our wants and needs. i also think it's a shame that our USA brass makers can't match Lapua's quality.
KevinThomas said:Jim,
You summed it up nicely but may have answered your own question when you mentioned "in this day and age." You have to remember, the technology used to turn out brass and bullets is precisely the same as it was a hundred years ago. While we now have CNC machinery to cut new tooling, the presses used to produce the items themselves hasn't changed much over the intervening decades. It's still a very labor intensive process to change tooling from one caliber to another, even if they're in the same "family" of cases. Ditto for the bullet production end of things. Give you an example; a certain bullet maker I'm quite familiar with has the two original presses that started the company back in 1947. These were purchased used, as government surplus for one of the many army ammunition plants that were shut down after WWII. They'd been in use there for several decades by then. While you might think they'd be on display in the company museum, no, they're on the production floor still cranking out bullets today. The only difference in them now from say, 50+years ago, is the addition of some computer sensors and safety shields. But basically, it's the same press. Change overs still take the same amount of time (maybe a bit longer, due to the computer stuff in place now), and it still takes the press off line for the same amount of time. Smaller runs cost the company more money, period.
terryperkins said:Kevin, could you tell me what the diameter of the neck wall thickness is of the Lapua 260Rem brass?