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This is where I'm at on casting. While I absolutely see the benefits from reloading in general, how long would it take me to recoup the initial costs to get setup for casting and powder coating? I also don't have a good source for lead and the other metals needed to make projectiles, so I'd be starting everything from scratch, unfortunately. Might still get into it at the new house since we'll have more room to store stuff, but not having a source of free lead would still put a damper on it compared to just buying PC'd pistol bullets for 7-9 cents per.
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I have a bunch of lead just in case and made some buckshot loads witha buddy of mine a while ago. But after doing some math I've decided to just buy plated bullets. Between the extra work and extra time the savings just aren't worth it to me.
This is where I'm at on casting. While I absolutely see the benefits from reloading in general, how long would it take me to recoup the initial costs to get setup for casting and powder coating? I also don't have a good source for lead and the other metals needed to make projectiles, so I'd be starting everything from scratch, unfortunately. Might still get into it at the new house since we'll have more room to store stuff, but not having a source of free lead would still put a damper on it compared to just buying PC'd pistol bullets for 7-9 cents per.
Imho, it’s about enjoying the hobby, increasing your skills, and relaxing, as reloading / casting is relaxing. it isn’t all about cost savings, I mean it can be, if you have the free time to source cheap lead, cheap brass, cheap powder, etc, far beyond just looking online for sales, and getting creative. People often take great pride at knowing these bullets / this ammo / this black powder was made by me, from scratch,
. That’s what I enjoy, the relaxing activities, the repetition, scrounging cheap components, creating my own custom ammo / bullets / powder, etc. it’s why I enjoy black smithing, welding, etc. because ANYONE with a credit card can buy anything tier 1 with a swipe, custom ammo, custom knife, etc, but being able to make these things yourself is a feeling credit card bro will never have. Plus it’s very useful skills.
As for scrounging, I haul out lead, rifle / pistol brass / steel / aluminum/ stainless steel / nuts / bolts / rebar / angle iron / sheet steel / copper wire / copper cable / cast iron antiques / old tools and farm equipment and much more from the local scrap yard junk yard and Facebook deals, providing very cheap materials / supplies for reloading, blacksmithing, metal working, farming, and crafting / creating shit. Like a treasure hunt.
Last scrap yard score was 10,000 pieces of lake city 5.56 mm for $20 a thousand scrap brass weight, and a 50 year old 20,000lb pto driven winch ( for $38.00 as it weighed 150lbs scrap steel weight ) I plan to mount on a counter weight for my tractor for recovering stuck equipment, dragging logs, etc.