The only problem with 300 whisper is that once you buy the gun parts, it will almost assuredly lead your to buying reloading equipment.
You are completely modular except for the barrel with 300 whisper. That is one of the sweet aspects of it.
Great for reloading, components are easy to come...
Over on ar-15.com in the reloading forum a guy had a big old write up about this very subject. he tumbles some .223 rounds for quite a while, then tore them apart to examine the powder. There was no breakdown that occured. He had pics and everything!:):
I do not understand why people would...
The book they are all reffering to is "lights out" by David Crawford.
He goes by Halfast on line.
This is a good read, and a book that I give every person close to me that expresses any kind of interest in prepping.
I run all of my raw brass through the tumbler with lizard litter ( walnut media) with some polish put in for good measure, as well as a dryer sheet cut up into 1-2 inch squares. I the process the brass completely. Once my brass is ready for loading, I run it through corn cob with some polish...
My brother in law has had several different things done by him, and is always happy with the results. He has a long wait time, but if that is not a concern, he does good work from what I have seen.
Bottom line is that Purdue does not allow you to carry on campus. Get caught carrying and you potentially risk being expelled from school. Concealed means concealed. Only you can assess the risk.
I too believe you are boned. On the dillon sets, you get a powder die, then you get an adapter in your conversion kit. That adapter flares the case, and also acts as a proper size powder drop doo-hinky.
well dan, that is up to you. FWIW, I am driving to the show from Brookston, which is about an hour and 15 to get there. If you have nothing better to do, then it would be worth it. If money is tight, or desperate for a deal, not so much.
I would decline. If their state citizens cannot own them, I certainly wouldn't sell it to him because he is above us peasants. Just tell him you are not comfortable selling a high cap mag to someone in a ban state.
Just got back from going this morning, holy cow ammo prices were high. Anything on the ban lists were very high. I saw none of them selling. Nice mix on other guns and handguns, a little high on the price tags for most semi-auto handguns tho.
I did see a guy selling double stack 1911 Caspian...