I'd like to try some or make some also.Have a link to some of that ring lube?
Or how to make my own?
Thx
Jim
I'd like to try some or make some also.Have a link to some of that ring lube?
Or how to make my own?
Thx
Jim
Jamie, I shoot a little cfbr(IBS score) & figure on about 60 rds a match. 25 for score & sighters of course.We may not have perfect ammo, but the day I have to start loading my own rimfire ammo for a match is the day I quit. There are very few guys shooting rimfire BR who are going to do that in my opinion.
It's one thing to load and shoot 20 rounds in a CF BR match (no idea how many they actually shoot as I don't shoot CF BR), but when we are shooting 50 rounds a card for 6 cards, no way most are doing that.
I am not saying it's not something to pursue if that is your thing, but it would require a new game and as bad as the ammo hunt can be, I just don't see enough demand to make custom rimfire ammo a sustainable endeavor from a match perspective.
Nope and Nope. It's just the losers whining about losing because the other guy has better ammo.In this parallel universe where now the RFBR game requires perfect/ hand loaded ammo, what is the cost to the competitor? Are u not then evolving into a money game? Those individuals with deep pockets ( assume shooting ability) will be the ones always in the winners circle. Competitors in all the various disciplines take about “ Buying points”, is this hand made rimfire benchrest ammo pushing the game in that direction?
That still makes it a money game. I test more lots of ammo n can purchase large quantity of what shoots small groups in my gun. Cases of quality RF ammo are not cheap. This assumes I have the “ Ability” to shoot those small groups.Nope and Nope. It's just the losers whining about losing because the other guy has better ammo.
It’s already a money game in some sense, just like most every other competitive game out there. It’s not the reason people lose, it’s the excuse.That still makes it a money game. I test more lots of ammo n can purchase large quantity of what shoots small groups in my gun. Cases of quality RF ammo are not cheap. This assumes I have the “ Ability” to shoot those small groups.
Try bass fishing, trap shooting, racing cars, etc. Rimfire br is a peanuts game money wise, we spend pennies where others spend dollars.That still makes it a money game. I test more lots of ammo n can purchase large quantity of what shoots small groups in my gun. Cases of quality RF ammo are not cheap. This assumes I have the “ Ability” to shoot those small groups.
Don't worry about hand loaded .22LR Cutting Edge ammo referred to above. Even if its use was permitted in RFBR, it's not good enough to be anything near competitive with average shooting Lapua or Eley. It's likely to remain uncompetitive with currently available supplies of casings and hand loading systems.In this parallel universe where now the RFBR game requires perfect/ hand loaded ammo, what is the cost to the competitor? Are u not then evolving into a money game? Those individuals with deep pockets ( assume shooting ability) will be the ones always in the winners circle. Competitors in all the various disciplines take about “ Buying points”, is this hand made rimfire benchrest ammo pushing the game in that direction?
10-4 on the shooting game being peanuts, money wise. Your examples of "thousands of dollars money pits" is right on.Try bass fishing, trap shooting, racing cars, etc. Rimfire br is a peanuts game money wise, we spend pennies where others spend dollars.
Don’t worry about the guys breaking that “factory” down, and reloading it…Don't worry about hand loaded .22LR Cutting Edge ammo referred to above. Even if its use was permitted in RFBR, it's not good enough to be anything near competitive with average shooting Lapua or Eley. It's likely to remain uncompetitive with currently available supplies of casings and hand loading systems.