that where your fire started LOLI try and keep my product I need for at least a year ahead I can probably go 2 years without being in a crunch I only shoot 600 and 1000yds benchrest.
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stan
that where your fire started LOLI try and keep my product I need for at least a year ahead I can probably go 2 years without being in a crunch I only shoot 600 and 1000yds benchrest.
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Guys I’m right there with you. Please be very careful of the pictures that you post. In this crazy world we don’t know who’s watching. I knew a gentleman who had the misfortune of a house fire. His insurance refused to pay for the reason of excess smokeless in his home. Keep in mind that there are limitations set by the BATF.
I support brunos. Hes one of the very few left that actually goes to matches and peddles his wares. I buy a lot of my supplies in person and there aint nowhere but a match for me to pick something up in person
This sport takes a financial toll on people especially when they try to get started, or just staying even with guns, scopes, tools, scale up grades ,components etc. one two or even three years ahead of supplies. holy crap it never ends and I’m happy for y’all that brag about being set for many years but when it comes to the I told ya so talk-maybe just give it a freaking rest.
Have a nice day![]()
NFPA 495 governs explosives for personal and business use
14.3.7.1......I am well out of compliance.NFPA 495 governs explosives for personal and business use
14.3.7.1 Smokeless propellants intended for personal use in quantities not exceeding 9.1 kg (20 lb) shall be permitted to be stored in original containers in residences.
14.3.7.2 Quantities exceeding 9.1 kg (20 lb), but not exceeding 22.7 kg (50 lb), shall be permitted to be stored in residences where kept in a wooden box or cabinet having walls of at least 25.4 mm (1 in.) nominal thickness or other container having a fire resistance of 1 hour .
14.5.6 For small arms primers classified by the U.S. DOT as 1.4S, the limit stored in residences shall be permitted to be increased to 150,000.
Dale
SW MI
Common core math. The new, new math.NFPA, a closed mouth gathers no foot.
dellet, I don’t know if that is being irrational, trying to be rational? Or being rational, trying to be irrational, lol![]()
Looks like a Lean Six Sigma project.Just thinking outside the box a bit here and looking at numbers. Wanting to help others save some cost on shooting to be able to buy more primers.
If primers have gone up 10 cents a shot and you shoot 10,000 rounds a year that’s a cost increase of $1000 per year.
If you backed off to the next lowest accuracy node what would be your savings? How much of that $1000 could we get back in these troubled times?
A 35 grain load at $35 a pound for powder is 200 rounds at a cost of 17.5 cents a shot. If you back off .5 grains, you save about .003 cents a shot or about $30 per 10000. Down to $970 per 10,000 rounds.
But wait, we’ve only just begun to count the savings.
By backing off the powder charge you might get as many as 3 more firing per case. If you pay $1 per case and get 10 firings that’s 1000 pieces of brass for $1000. If you can average only 2 more shots per case you only need 800, that’s a savings of $200 per 10,000 shots. Now we’re are at $770 per 10,000 shots.
What about barrel life?
Can you get another 100 shots out of that $500 barrel?
Based on 3000/3100 shots per barrel you save another $50. Down to $720 per 10,000 shots. We’ve saved enough to buy another 2000 primers.
If you shoot 200 rounds per match, that’s 50 matches per 10,000 rounds. Your overall cost has gone up about $14 per match, instead of $20.
Sadly, there is a hidden cost to dropping an accuracy node, so most people won’t do it. It might effect your score. For argument let’s say your score drops enough that you fall five places on the score board.
On average how much less prize money will you take home per match?
Not saying it doesn’t suck to pay more to play, or feel like a vendor is ripping you off, or taking advantage of a situation, but it’s just a game for most of us.
Current conditions are temporary and if the overall cost of going to matches in these times is keeping you home, the cost of a primer is not likely to be enough to change that for most shooters.
It is fun to bitch about it, so that should some how also figure in to the total entertainment cost package, since it’s free to bitch and whine.![]()
Oh the flashbacks you just gave me back when i had a ceo named jack.Looks like a Lean Six Sigma project.
Must’ve been specific. Which insurance company? I was an adjuster for 26 years and handled 1000’s and 1000’s of claims for several different companies. Don’t recall any exclusions for too much powder in yer house…Guys I’m right there with you. Please be very careful of the pictures that you post. In this crazy world we don’t know who’s watching. I knew a gentleman who had the misfortune of a house fire. His insurance refused to pay for the reason of excess smokeless in his home. Keep in mind that there are limitations set by the BATF.