New WW .308 brass, double punched primer pockets?

Brad

Benevolent Overlord and site owner
Staff member
Nice to see customer service still exists in some areas.
 

fiver

Well-Known Member
that's actually impressive.

Littlegirl broke the sear on her Remington competition shotgun.
the phone number in the owners manual had been dis-connected already.
when I dropped the gun off to the smith he was hung up on twice and was on hold for so long he cut, milled out the wood, drilled the top, installed the bushings, and installed the bottom of the cheek riser in my SKB while listening to their music.
 

Pistolero

Well-Known Member
Not sure I understand what the liability issue might be. I doubt this is actually any sort
of safety issue, but sure will not produce top accuracy.

Glad to hear that they will refund.

I have two batches of .30-06 new brass I bought for match use. Rem and Win. The weight
variation on the Win is so high that I won't even consider it for match work in Vintage
Sniper. IIRC the SD of 100 cases was 4 times the SD of the Rem. Shockingly bad, IMO.

Bill
 

RBHarter

West Central AR
Rem has their moments too . A friend brought me 5 boxes of 1 lot from some 180 Cor-lokt he had shot up over a couple of yr . He complained that his normally 1-1.5 inch rifle had been throwing fliers with it , low and high at 10 and 2 .
While the core of about 60 fell into a group of 193-195 gr there were 10 or so of under 190 gr and 14 over 205 . Which at least in my shooting experience has been the reason for what he described .

I've decided that to have a sufficient lot for a particular load development that one must pick a flavor that offers the most consistent results (as in this particular rifle I have won't shoot Rem at all but thrives on LC and isn't bad with Win) . Then buy a bagged lot factory direct of 1000 . Then be tickled when you actually have a core lot of 300 within 1.5 gr .

Since I'm not that fussy I'm good with 60 within 2.5 in 100.