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I picked up a bunch of random 40 federal NT's off the range one time.
I loaded a few of them and noticed that the primers were noticeably harder to seat and would flatten out to some degree. They all shot fine, however I threw the rest of the brass out because of that problem.
bought a brand new 870 today and it was doing the same thing, but only took a little extra bit of a tug to get it unstuck. Still a hassle none the less, hopefully it'll break itself in.
I've got a 4" 10-5 with a pencil barrel.
I love my friends' faces (die-hard Glock fans) when my "40 year old, outdated, and beat up" revolver out shoots their guns no matter the distance.
Thanks for the quick replies. Oddly enough none of them have high primers and every one of them seated flush.
Was a little worried, but now that I know nothing "bad" will happen I'll just shoot em'.
I primed one of the NT cases and shot it blank out of my Beretta. Went pop, nothing...
Whatever I can find that's copper plated and cheap.
Usually that means I reload 155g. However, a few weekends ago I found some dirt cheap 165 RNFMJ, and now I'm reloading that.
So I've been collecting .40 brass for a while, and finally got around to loading 1000 rounds today.
My batch was mixed Winchester, Federal, CCI, Blazer, R-P, and Federal NT.
I noticed some resistance on my 550b every time I tried to seat a Winchester primer into one of the Federal NT's. I...
Model 10 is a great gun, you will not regret buying one. $245 is a bargain for one that is in 90%+ condition. The vast majority of ones I see are between $300-375.
I just purchased a stainless Uberti Cattleman in .357 not to long ago and am very pleased with its performance.
For a $450 SA pistol, its well built, solid, and shoots a nice tight group with .38 (have yet to shoot .357 out of it).
For $950 I would go with the P226 if you are looking for a range toy and not a safe queen.
The Marine Corps Edition M9 is just a $450 M9 with some engraving and 1/1000 serial number on it.
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