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| I have a lot of 9mm components and I do load them. I still have a couple of cases of Blazer Brass when I got it on sale for $8.49 a box. 9mm is somewhat cheap. 45 Colt, 357 Mag, 45 acp are way cheaper to load not to mention all of my rifles. I got lucky and put away a lot of components after Obama caused his big drought. Bought a ton of primers when they were $35 per thousand.
Yeah, I used to have a couple of guns.
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| Posts: 434 | Location: North Central Ohio | Registered: February 08, 2009 |
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Spread the Disease
| I typically only load and shoot subsonic 9mm. I feel like it’s worth it still.
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-- Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past me I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain. --
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| Oz - Based on today’s prices for the required components I would hesitate to spend a lot of time in front of my reloaded - but having reloaded for over 40 years now, I have built up a significant inventory of the needed components over the years.
Somewhat seeing the first and second primer “shortage” coming (especially the second one) and somewhat the powder and projectile shortage that occurred several years back, I stocked up. I am still loading and shooting primers that cost me between $0.02 to $0.03 each ($20.00 to $30.00 a thousand) and powder that cost $20.00 a lb or less (have several 8lb jugs of W231 that cost me $149.00). I also still have real fmj 9mm projectiles that cost around $0.05 each so for me I still reload today.
I also reload so I can load my “powder puff” rounds for local steel challenge and IDPA matches that I know work in my various guns.
Truth told, at 64 I load for the enjoyment of the quiet time and sense of accomplishment. Nothing looks better than an ammo can full of freshly loaded 9mm ammo, except for an ammo can full of sub-sonic 300 Blackout that were made from LC 223 brass that I converted on one of my Dillon presses. Now there is a huge savings when reloading 300 Blackout vs. today’s factory loaded ammo IMO.
I did pick up several cases of factory ammo (various calibers) when prices were low. I look at that as our “go to” ammo if we ever had to use our guns for hunting or self defense. |
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| One can ask a similar question if it pays to have a vegetable garden. In many ways it can get into the hobby & enjoyable areas.
Even with the home chickens & fresh eggs, all kinds of places around here sell for $3 a dozen. One of my favorite small vegetable stands has good sized tomatoes for $1 each. The prices are good with other offerings also.
I loaded some 243 for a youth deer hunter last year. I kept the loads modest, one shot he had his deer.
I just ordered a 375 Ruger rifle, no real need, but kinda wanted one. I’ll start out with modest loads.
As to the 9mm question, maybe not. I don’t mind shooting factory if prices are right. |
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Quit staring at my wife's Butt
| I purchased lots of components when they were cheap, so for my the 9 mm are totally worth reloading I have enough to last many years |
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| I roll RMR and Berry's 147s for running stages on steel using N320 and N330 so yes .... the answer for me is yes. I also run SIG 147 V-Crowns for PD loads juiced with VV so yes ... it is definitely worth reloading 9mm. 115s paper punching, no. Hot 124s for the carbine, yes.
___________________________________________________________ In a nation where anything goes ... everything eventually will.
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| Posts: 104 | Location: South Carolina | Registered: September 18, 2020 |
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| Still cheaper to reload 9mm than buy factory. |
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| Posts: 229 | Location: Earth, Colorado | Registered: March 30, 2002 |
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Spiritually Imperfect
| I had to start over from scratch after losing everything in a flood mid-2022. Everything reloading-oriented was destroyed. 9mm is my main caliber. Where I’m at now is about $175-180 per thousand using plated 147 grain RMR bullets. Using coated 135 grain Acme bullets, I’m at about $150-155 per thousand. Aguila primers are $62/k, and CFE Pistol powder is about 2.5 cents per round at 4.0 grains. I love the process, especially using a new Dillon XL750. |
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