Yes Sir, my math may be bad but isn’t that a 26% increase.And today that same 8 pounder is $464.00
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yes Sir, my math may be bad but isn’t that a 26% increase.And today that same 8 pounder is $464.00
Yes Sir, my math may be bad but isn’t that a 26% increase.
I agree with you all the way!I was on board until that last part.
That sounds like a lot of fun, good luck with it!Sounds about right to me. I'm happy I don't need anything right now except some bullets for my new .30 BR I haven't got to shoot yet, I'm going to put the scope on tomorrow though so things are looking up.
You guys better watch out or you’ll get PM’s in the middle of the night about how wrong you are and it’s all Trumps fault. lol.I agree with you all the way!
Already closed Instagram, lolYou guys better watch out or you’ll get PM’s in the middle of the night about how wrong you are and it’s all Trumps fault. lol.
This is getting to be a different place and I may have to leave it to em.
Yep, and anyone thinking this is a political issue is missing it. You want stale prices, and no price increases, you better want a bad economy! Because anytime the prices go up, is when the economy is going up, and wages stay stale.Powder is going to be hard to get again .
In them good old days my 72 Chevy CS/T 350 Ci. 350 hydramatic, standard 1/2 ton, lucky to see 10 mpg and never seen 100,000 mile without repairs, let alone see 150,000, by then they were burning oil, had the 3rd or 4th exhast replaced, tranny and motors were shot. Then figure regular maintenance intervals every 3000 mi. Tune ups 24,000 mile, figure the cost,For comparison; my first pick up truck was a bare-bones 1971 Chevy C10. Straight six, three-on-the-tree, rubber floor mat, bench seat. 2WD. The window sticker price was $2,400.
My next truck was 7,900. Third one, loaded with all the options, was 24,700. My last truck was 28K (K2500HD 7.4L 4WD but again, rubber floor mat and bench seat).
That 1971 at 2,400, in today’s dollars it would be 18,178. But a comparable truck today would be 36,800. Now, I don’t know what the proper anylisis of that would be to my calculation, after the inflation factor is accounted for that’s just about a 100% price increase. More than double the price (4,895 in 1971 in today's dollars is 36,802).
In 1971 as a (very!) young man, I was earning about 12,000 a year. In today’s dollars that’s 90,888. I can tell you, people doing that kind of job today are not anywhere near that. If they are making half of that, they’re at the top of the pay scale. So, the cost of that truck, after accounting for inflation, has doubled while the real income (before tax etc.) has reduced by half.
I think this is representative of a lot of things in our economy today. Reloading components MAY have had a lesser “real” price increase over time it would seem to me. I didn’t start reloading until the late ‘90s, someone else may comment on this.
To top it off, that ‘71 6 cyl. 3 sp. ½ ton truck would pull a gravity wagon full of corn out of the field and down the road to the elevator or be over-stacked with hay bales, not over taxing drive train, suspension or brakes. My father-in-law had a similar F150 and so did the farm where I worked part-time. They were all up to the task. Do that with one of the cheap pick-ups you can buy today and see how it works out! Double the (pre-inflation) price, half the capability?
I think reloading costs are the least of our worries although when you see increases of this scale in a short period of time, it IS hard to swallow.
Now look at the 2024 trucks, and trust me over 20 mpg with more power, even a base model has more features than what that 72 called options was available with, no tune ups, engine and tranny capable of at least 300,000 and still run like new, on annual services.
Yup! In the end, I may just be shooting against myself but at least I’ll be shooting something and at pre-pandemic prices.The best retirement investment I made was a lifetime supply of primers and powder.
Glad I stocked up in 2006. Looks as though my investment made me a good profit....Bought 8 lb N133 yesterday--at Bluecollar--was $289 The last one I bought year and half ago was $272 VV has not done like the rest of them yet. Now Varget--umm hold on tight !!
Yep just like Moderna, Phifzer etc.start listening to the manufacturers when they tell you it's not getting any better
What was Vista stock prince in 2020? 7.00Yep just like Moderna, Phifzer etc.
Those honest manufacturers would never lie to us