Over the weekend, my nephew and I ran 1,000 rounds of .223 through the LnL press.
Still have plenty of components but will try to restock at affordable prices.
I was a Boy Scout -- be prepared!
45Badger wrote:If you're stocked, sit back and wait. If you're not, sit back and wait. Production ALWAYS catches up with demand. Have a Merry Christmas!
dleong wrote:I was at the Lakeville FF last Sunday on an animal crackers run, and took the opportunity to drop by their firearms counter.
The severe lack of AR-related merchandise and .223/5.56 ammo there did not bother me as much as discovering that they've raised the price of their 28 oz. bag of animal crackers to above $4.
SIGP240 wrote:# 1: Ammo is the new currency
# 2: 1 gun with a lot of ammo trumps 10 guns and NO ammo
# 3: Timing is EVERYTHING (Buy 'yesterday')
The Twin Cities Ordnance Plant (TCOP) was established in 1941 as part of the War Department’s government-owned, contractor-operated war materials production program. Federal Cartridge Corporation (FCC) was awarded the contract to construct and operate the plant, which resided in Mounds View Township (later apportioned as the cities of Arden Hills, Mounds View, and New Brighton) and whose mailing address was New Brighton, Minnesota. Construction began August 28, 1941, and production of .30 and .50 caliber cartridges began on February 2, 1942. TCOP produced more than four billion rounds by war’s end and at its peak (July 1943) employed approximately 26,000 people—more than half of whom were women.
Production ceased in July 1945, the Army’s contract with FCC was terminated in March 1946, and TCOP was put on standby. The Army’s Ordnance Department assumed plant management, renaming it the Twin Cities Arsenal on April 1, 1946. In response to the Korean War, the Arsenal resumed production in August 1950 when the federal government again contracted with FCC. In August 1958, the Arsenal was again put on standby.
The Army was reorganized in 1962, and the Ordnance Department was subsumed by the newly created Army Material Command. Consequently, the Arsenal was renamed the Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (TCAAP) in 1963. In response to the escalating Vietnamese conflict in Southeast Asia, TCAAP produced small arms (1966-1973) and artillery shells (1967-1976).
XDM45 wrote:Why not just buy your ammo online?
xd ED wrote:XDM45 wrote:Why not just buy your ammo online?
A: I'm not really in need, just curious
and
B: I'm not being a smartaz
Do you know of any for sale?
I quit looking just now after the 1st 10 google returns said 'sold out'
SIGP240 wrote:# 1: Ammo is the new currency
# 2: 1 gun with a lot of ammo trumps 10 guns and NO ammo
# 3: Timing is EVERYTHING (Buy 'yesterday')
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