http://www.govliquidation.com/auction/view?auctionId=6003708&convertTo=USD
Home)
Now only if I could find projectiles… :rolleyes:
http://www.govliquidation.com/auction/view?auctionId=6003708&convertTo=USD
Home)
Now only if I could find projectiles… :rolleyes:
Sorry. Just saw a similar link here:
Whoa! Can I get a rough count??? What caliber?
Dangit, your sharing my local secret! I had dibs on that!
16,500lbs of 5.56
Split some with ya! ![]()
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Roughly 1.8 million pieces of brass.
I think I saw somewhere that if you spent 5 days a week, 4 hours a night reloading the stuff at a rate of 1000 rounds per hour … it would take 17 years to load it all.
EDIT: My bad … those stats are for the 28,000 pound lot … either way … you get the picture.
I never thought to look on GL for brass. Curious what these actually close at.
I need brass, but not that much, and how in the hell would I get it home and store it?
Could be a bunch of M249 brass mixed in there. ![]()
You don’t have a flat bed laying around? ![]()
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Here’s 15k lbs of 5.56 in drums. This may be easier for you to transport & store.
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No good for accuracy or no good to reload at all?
M249 has headspace slop in the chamber and the cases stretch beyond what it does in the M16/M4 chamber, which leads to case head separation issues. That’s the reason I don’t reload fired LC brass unless I bought it brand new and fired it myself. I’ll process it for others, but I don’t reload it even for my own rifles.
Yeah… I’ve never handled any of the 249 brass… but case separations are a pain in the AR. Not dangerous or anything, but annoying.
I’ll process and use once fired LC brass picked up at the public range. I’ve never seen a 249 out there. ![]()
Thanks for the info.
I happened to see a 1,055 lb lot very close to my home and it has me intrigued. My reloading ignorance is nearly complete so I apologize if this is a moronic question - would I be able to visibly tell or would it be a matter of finding out when the cases fail?
I am thinking it would be worth it to save some and scrap some if I can score the lot for the right price so it would not be a total loss if there is a bunch that I can not have reloaded.
You might be able to hand check it in a case guage. Drop a piece into the guage and look at how much shoulder bump it needs.
You can also sometimes see the link staining on the brass body. But if the brass is dirty, that might not be very visible.
Scrap value on brass is pretty good if you don’t sell to a shady recycler.
Thanks Mark. I have a good guy that we use for scrap so we could probably get a good price. I’ll call him before I bid.
Thanks for all the info.
That’s perfect. If you can bid at scrap value or not much more, you’re pretty well hedged.
Anything below scrap value and you’re gold!
If you’re bidding on a government auction, read the details. They usually require a deposit wired to their bank account in order for your bid to be accepted. This weeds out the guys jacking the price up and leaves it to the serious buyers.
Will do. I have a few days to investigate before the bidding opens on the auction. I am going to call them and establish an account the day before if we go after it.
Thanks again guys.