hunt127588 said:Price is mainly due to monetary conversion factors. I don't think it's due to the fact that "it's better". American's are trying to compete with Lapua brass via Nosler brass. It may not be on the same playing field but it's our attempt.
One thing I have noticed is that Europeans take much pride in the arms they produce. Look at Sako, Lapua and others. It may have to do with more stringent requirements for their goods.
CatShooter said:It's the lack of the american shooters to pay two to four times the price for brass.
Remember that 99% of shooters are not match shooters and they don't care a bit about brass quality.
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usngunner said:I have a friend with several long range records. He personally got 32 reloads of one box of Lapua .308. That was annealing every 2nd time fired. He said it still looked good but he thew it away as he just couldn't believe it.
That is the kind of study a lot of us are using.![]()
BillK said:tightneck-I gotta call you out on this one!!! What qualifies you to say Lapua will last ten times longer? What study was this based on? I have use nothing but winchester and remington brass and have won my fair share of stuff with it. Unless the radioactive decay of Lapua brass is slower than the rest you can anneal necks and get whatever brass to last a long long long time. I know a family that shoots at Williamsport PA that are probably some of the best 1000yd benchrest shooters in the world that use nothing but winchester brass. In fact they use the really old winchester brass and they said it lasts a long long time. Heck I have remington brass for my 25-06 that I have been using for 13 or 14 years!!! If you are willing to sort american brass and you know what you are doing with it it is as good as anything else. If you are trying to save time and want to shoot cases out of the box and have a no turn neck then yeah Lapua or Norma may be the answer.
tightneck said:BillK said:"... But I do have Lapua 220 Russian and 6mmbr cases with well over 200 firings on them. That's not with pussycat loads either.
Now THAT'S impressive...
... or being real cheap!
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CatShooter said:tightneck said:BillK said:"... But I do have Lapua 220 Russian and 6mmbr cases with well over 200 firings on them. That's not with pussycat loads either.
Now THAT'S impressive...
... or being real cheap!
.
Maybe a little cheap. No seriously, the chambers are obviously very tight and these cases go from match duty to play duty after about ten firings. There's nothing like new brass when you go to the line at a big match. But for messing around at the range and varmint shooting, cases will last as long as I want them to. I just got back from the Super Shoot and all the brass I prepped up and shot there is now relegated to the recycle pile. I've already got plenty of practice brass and the scrap yards are paying top dollar for brass, copper and lead.
varmintslayer said:...Today, the highest quality brass is produced in the Netherlands and that's where Lapua happens to be....