Jager
Gold $$ Contributor
I was browsing one of my old issues of Handloader Magazine (May-June, 1974, #49) and had to laugh when I came across Neal Knox's old column, Lock, Stock, and Barrel. Neal started off with:
"WITHIN THE PAST couple of months I’ve been getting a lot of mail from readers concerned -about components shortages, and whopping increases in costs. Some have worried that this is the result of companies cutting back on production, or allocating a higher percentage of components to loaded ammunition, in an effort to “squeeze out” the handloader.
That isn’t what’s happening. There are shortages on the dealers’ shelves, and prices on some items have spiraled, but the cause - so far as I can determine doesn’t lie in the manufacturers. On the contrary, most of the manufacturers are producing at full capacity."
We tend to think that whatever situation we're experiencing in the present is new and unique and special. It seems we are ever destined to learning the same thing over and over again!
The message is pretty obvious... buy what you can, when you can. Because those components that we all depend upon - and too often take for granted - will inevitably go missing at some point.
"WITHIN THE PAST couple of months I’ve been getting a lot of mail from readers concerned -about components shortages, and whopping increases in costs. Some have worried that this is the result of companies cutting back on production, or allocating a higher percentage of components to loaded ammunition, in an effort to “squeeze out” the handloader.
That isn’t what’s happening. There are shortages on the dealers’ shelves, and prices on some items have spiraled, but the cause - so far as I can determine doesn’t lie in the manufacturers. On the contrary, most of the manufacturers are producing at full capacity."
We tend to think that whatever situation we're experiencing in the present is new and unique and special. It seems we are ever destined to learning the same thing over and over again!
The message is pretty obvious... buy what you can, when you can. Because those components that we all depend upon - and too often take for granted - will inevitably go missing at some point.