Posted on 08/26/2012 1:29:21 PM PDT by autumnraine
Ammunition Solicitation Number: AG-91S8-S-12-0031 Agency: Department of Agriculture Office: Forest Service Location: R-5 Pacific Southwest Region
"DELIVERY IS IMPORTANT. AMMO NEEDED WITHIN 30 DAYS."
PDF link at site.
If this is true you’d think at least a few government employees, such as forrest rangers, would go public. Unless they’re all robots.
You might be onto something there. Not with this buy, but with some of the other big buys. I have gone through over 30,000 primers just for fun and practice in the last two or three years. I can easily assemble a thousand cartridges in a day on my turret press and twice that many on my progressive.
My beautiful bride and I go through at least a couple hundred rounds every time we go to the range. That's only about $10 worth when you cast your own pistol bullets. We have shot hundreds more than that on numerous occasions. Sometimes it takes a lot of shots to get her trigger finger tired.
I prefer to think that instead of spending $50 or a $100 on ammo... that we have just saved hundreds of dollars by reloading our own cartridges.
People are confusing the US Forest Service (USFS, Dept of Agriculture) with the National Park Service (NPS, Dept of Interior) National Parks do have LEO Rangers, but the US Forest Service has very few of them and many are not armed. National Parks are completely different than National Forests.
This ammo order if for the USFS (Dept of Agriculture) NOT National Park Rangers.
And who is using/needing 12,000 rounds of .380 ACP?
It almost looks as if somebody in the USFS Vallejo (CA) office is buying ammo for their own personal use?
Whoops! My mistake. Thank you for the correction.
Thanks for this. I have always wanted to get into loading but never had the time. Sounds like a good idea. Are the bullets you cast as accurate as the ‘store bought’ ones?
That's all well and good but it's something more than mere coincidence that all these departments happened upon ammo to finish off their 2011 budget. None needed copy paper or office chairs?
It depends on the application. For maximum accuracy non-jacketed bullets need to have a hardness that matches the amount of pressure you put behind them. Bullets that deform just the right amount going down the barrel actually perform better than store bought jacketed bullets.
It is difficult to make a non-jacketed cast bullet hard enough to match the pressures developed by a truly high powered cartridge. Although straight wheel weight alloy dropped into a bucket of water gives just about the right hardness for a 7.62x39 bullet. You can vary the hardness by by altering your alloy and/or heat treating. For cartridges with room for more powder such as .308, 762x54, and 30-06, you pretty much have to reduce the amount of powder or you will end up with poor performance and lead left in your barrel. I have a tool that measures the hardness of my bullets. There is a pretty wide range of pressures developed even in pistol cartridges.
Of course for maximum accuracy it is also good to sort your cast bullets by weight and inspect for casting defects.
Hey, PEA-pul! Stuff happens out in the woods. I’m sure there’s a perfectly logical explanation for this. Haven’t you ever heard of crazed, lunatic beavers?! :)
Http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/09/06/it-bit-me-so-bad-says-virginia-woman-83-mauled-by-rabid-beaver/
Well, if the Forestry Dept. had only said the 250,000 rounds of ammo was for rabid beavers, this would not have ended up on the NJCT ping list.
Good to see you.
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