bulk ammo sources

Grumpy

The Grumpy Grease Monkey mechanical engineer.
Staff member
http://www.ammoman.com/10mm


http://www.bulkammo.com/

http://palmettostatearmory.com/lake-city-m855-5-56x45-1000rd-bulk-package.html#Reviews

https://www.outdoorlimited.com/specials/bulk-ammo/

https://www.ammoboard.com/ Phone: 877-229-0351

https://www.freedommunitions.com

https://www.ammoboard.com/

https://www.ammunitiontogo.com/

http://palmettostatearmory.com/federal-american-eagle-223-55gr-fmj-1000rd-bulk-pack.html

http://www.gunbot.net/ammo/rifle/556/

http://gunbot.net/

http://www.sgammo.com/

http://www.targetsportsusa.com/rifle-ammo-c-27.aspx

http://www.ammunitiontogo.com/index.php/cName/rifle-ammo-308-762-nato

http://www.selwayarmory.com/shop-by-category/rifle-ammunition.html

http://www.ammonv.com/collections/frontpage/products/9mm-115-gr-50-rounds

http://ammunitionstore.com/categories/rifle-ammunition/223-5-56x45mm.html

http://ammoseek.com/

http://www.targetsportsusa.com/308-winchester762x51mm-nato-ammo-c-101.aspx

http://www.sgammo.com/

http://www.sportsmansguide.com/prod...fle-ammo/308-winchester-ammo?d=121&c=96&s=919

http://www.the-armory.com/shopsite_sc/store/html/308_Ammunition.html

http://www.cabelas.com/category/Rifle-Ammunition/104532480.uts

http://ammunitionstore.com/categories/rifle-ammunition/308-7-62x51mm.html

https://www.midwayusa.com/308-winchester/br?cid=22188

http://www.ammunitiontogo.com/index.php/cName/308-762-nato-all-308-762-nato

(components for reload)

http://www.zediker.com/downloads/m14.html

https://www.midsouthshooterssupply....in-full-metal-jacket-boat-tail-2-and-100-case

https://www.etsy.com/listing/233793332/308762-military-lake-city-brass?ref=related-4

https://www.etsy.com/listing/240137047/once-fired-military-brass-308762-lake?ref=related-1

https://www.etsy.com/listing/220119359/once-fired-military-brass-223556-lc-only?ref=related-3

https://www.wideners.com/reloading-...308-win-bullets-308-147-grain-fmj-500-reviews


https://www.wideners.com/reloading-supplies/bullets/rifle-bullets/223-bullets


https://www.midsouthshooterssupply....in-hollow-point-boat-tail-matchking-500-count

https://www.midsouthshooterssupply....t-tail-hollow-point-with-cannelure-4500-count

https://www.midsouthshooterssupply....in-full-metal-jacket-boat-tail-2-and-100-case

http://www.brownells.com/reloading/bullets/rifle-bullets/bulk-bullets-prod37662.aspx

http://www.handloads.com/loaddata/default.asp?Caliber=308 Winchester&Weight=All&type=Rifle&Source=

http://www.hodgdonreloading.com/

http://www.handloads.org/loaddata/default.asp?Caliber=223 Remington&Weight=All&type=rifle&Order=Powder&Source=

http://www.handloads.org/loaddata/default.asp?Caliber=308+Winchester&Weight=All&type=Rifle




http://www.bearblain.com/Service Rifle Loadings.html
 
Last edited:
btw for the few guys on the website that will buy ammo in bulk, shop carefully and read the fine print in the adds,
be aware that steel case berdan primed ammo, like this Russian import ammo, TULA,WOLF ,WPA,BEAR etc.
is a HUGE p.i.t.a. to reload and components are nearly impossible to obtain cheaply, and steel cases are NOT designed for ease of reloading

boxer primed brass case ammo, the type most American manufacturers manufacture and sell, is generally what you'll want if you have any intention of reloading the cases, imported ammo,in general,is usually foreign military surplus, that does not tend to be the exact high quality that fresh American manufactured ammo , (federal, winchester,lake city) but most functions well and is safe to use. as a guide, $600 a thousand is generally a decent price on brass cased boxer, primed plinking ammo for a 308 win mill surplus ammo, $450-$500 per thousand for 7.62-39 and 223 rem is not bad
http://www.ammunitiontogo.com/product_info.php/pName/500rds-308-win-tula-150gr-fmj-steel-case-ammo

http://ammunitionstore.com/products/7-62x51mm-ammo-147gr-m80-fmj-zqi-20-round-box.html

http://www.the-armory.com/shopsite_...m-145gr-fmj-bt-ppu-ammo-box-20rds_ss1875.html
 
Last edited:
http://www.ammunitiontogo.com/product_info.php/pName/1000rds-223-pmc-bronze-55gr-fmj-ammo

this looks like a good value

http://www.keepshooting.com/c-products-ar-15-magazine.html

having a dozen extra magazines would not hurt a bit either

http://garage.grumpysperformance.co...-common-sense-storing-loaded-magazines.12465/
and having a secure place to store extra magazines and ammo is especially important
a couple air and water tight surplus 20mm ammo cans for storing rifle magazines are about ideal
ammocan.JPG
 
Last edited:
I have never, ever had anyone tell me that he had too much ammunition. Not in a combat zone, not in a civil disaster, not even in peacetime. Never. Nor have I lived through a time where our governing class was so deeply corrupt, so utterly foolish, and so dangerously focused on the perpetuation of its own power that it risked bringing down everything we have built not merely in the United States but in the entire West.

Right now, if you are watching the news, you have questions about the future. And the answer to all of them is to buy ammo.

Buying ammo is a no-lose proposition. Look, the worst thing that happens if you buy more ammo is that you have more ammo. Plus, much of our consumer ammo is made by hardworking Americans, and many of those ammo makers are located in red states where the right to keep and bear arms is celebrated and respected. So you’re helping fellow conservative Americans, which is good. And you’re infuriating people like that sanctimonious, Second Amendment-hating incompetent infesting the White House, which is great.

Of course, buying ammo presumes you have already fulfilled your duty as a law-abiding, able-bodied American citizen and obtained sufficient firearms for the defense of yourself, your family, your community, and your Constitution. I can’t tell you how many people in the last year have confessed to me that they have finally decided to visit their local gun seller to do what they had put off for far too long and transition from sheep to sheepdog.


A handgun and a long weapon per adult is merely the minimum. We call that “a good start.” Now, while you can really efficiently carry only two weapons at once, when all hell breaks loose you’re going to have friends who were the grasshopper to your ant and did not prepare for winter. You may wish to share the contents of your armory with them when the time comes; keep in mind that the only thing in a gunfight that’s better than having a black combat rifle is having your buddy there to provide supporting fire with a black combat rifle.

Or a shotgun – diversity is a good thing.

Don’t forget training. Malpractice with a weapon is a bad thing, particularly when the foolishness of our leaders has led to the kind of chaos where hospitals are deserted and antibiotics are hard to come by. I oversaw the weapons training of at least 20,000 troops over my career (Sergeants actually do the training; officers oversee the planning, resourcing, and big picture range operations, then find their sharpest sergeant to run them through some refresher drills so they can shoot “Expert” when they hit the firing line and qualify in front of everyone). I am a big fan of weapons training. You need to learn safety, and you also need to learn how to hit what you are shooting at. Don’t be like the gangbanging, side-shooting nimrods in Democrat inner cities who can’t hit the other scumbags they’re shooting at and instead take out nice ladies walking home from church. Having lots of ammo on hand facilitates training.


Now, many of our urban liberal friends will not understand why we insist on ensuring that we have plenty of guns and ammo. They are, not coincidentally, the same urban liberals who don’t understand how creating economic and political chaos by screwing up the economy, coddling crooks, allowing unrestricted immigration, refusing to defeat our enemies, and frittering away the rule of law all act to undermine this wonderful island of relative peace and stability we call the United States. The über-beta editor of a well-known liberal website once chided me on Twitter for pointing out the fact that civilization walks on a tightrope over a chasm of chaos, telling me I was essentially nuts for thinking this could all fall apart much faster and much more violently than any of us imagine. But I was not nuts. I was remembering. I was remembering Los Angeles on fire during the Rodney King riots. I spent three weeks on the streets with the Army during that little life lesson based out of an armory south of I-10 and east of the 405. Let’s just say that it was a looty, shooty area. So I don’t need chaos lessons from some tweedy femboy, nor do you. It may not be apocalypse now, but it could very well be apocalypse soon.


Do you think our elite is going to protect you during the next “uprising?” Remember, it’s a “riot” only if elite liberals are at risk like they were when Beverly Hills got threatened; it’s an “uprising” if only you are. Remember that “stand down” order in Baltimore?

Do you think the Iranians and our other enemies haven’t been watching Team Feckless in inaction and thought about popping off a hot rock or two a hundred miles above Kansas City to fry all our wonderful electronic gizmos with EMP? A couple days after our logistics networks go down those urban hipsters are going to learn what really constitutes a “food desert.”

Do you think a country this politically divided can’t devolve into violence? People in Kosovo were pretty sure everything was hunky dory while Tito was alive. People resolved their differences through the institutions. And then Tito died, and the game changed. In just a few years, it became very bad.


Right now we have a president who thinks he can ignore or modify the law unilaterally, justifying it with the baffling argument that he shouldn’t have to ask Congress because Congress will just say “No” – which I always thought was kind of the point of checks and balances. So what happens when President Clinton, who identified you and me and the 50% of Americans who aren’t her supporters as her enemies, decides she gets to make her own laws because, well, she knows better and feels like it? Nothing good.

But deterrence is a wonderful thing. An armed, trained populace is not only prepared for when things go bad, but the fact that it is armed and trained makes it much less likely that things will go bad in the first place. Last year, Americans voted for liberty by buying well over 15 million new guns. That’s roughly 40,000 a day, every day. That’s enough to arm three infantry divisions.

Every. Single. Day.

Just don’t forget to buy ammo.
 
have you been to your local gun shop or range lately?
Im all for teaching the novices to safely handle firearms and helping them gain the required skills,
but watching the new customers is not making me feel that confident in a few cases.
in my opinion, it would be darn hard to have acquired "TOO MUCH AMMO"
and it would be rather foolish to own any firearm you might consider for personal or home defensive use,
for which you don,t have at least several hundred cartridges readily at hand at all times and several magazines.
I find it rather amusing and rather depressing when I see people in PANIC MODE" desperate to buy a box of ammo,
I would think if you're consistent in your thought process concerning your personal and families security,
you would at all times keep your ammo supply at at least safe minimum levels.
now that does in no way suggest you need to hoard vast amounts of ammo,
but Id darn sure want 100-200 cartridges for the rifle or pistol or shotgun,
I was planning on using in any theoretical home invasion style, confrontation,
If I was under the impression, that society and law enforcement were to totally break down,
like the mad max apocalypse scenario
and only you alone could be able to defend your family,
(something I hope we never see and really don't expect to see happen)
but something Ive heard discussed as if its imminent
(I think thats about as likely as winning the lotto)
but I see guys at the local gun shops trying to buy up cases of ammo,
and at prices that would make me gag!
I find it even more amusing and depressing when I know
the purchaser has no idea that #4 birdshot and buck shot are different,
or that the last box of 38 super ammo clutched in his hand will not fit his 38 spc revolver
 
Last edited:
While I'm not allowed to work I've been prepping brass I never realized how much of it I've gathered over the years some I will get rid of and some I will buy bullets for and reload. My pistol brass I weighed out a pound and counted how much is in a pound so I can get the bullets I need I plan on using the progressive press on this so I will need the same thing times a bunch 2 - 5 gallon buckets of 9mm brass prepped and cleaned, 1 bucket almost full of 40 cal, and 3 buckets of 45 ACP now today I start on the rifle brass
 
ITS scarry how un-informed , and un-skilled many--- maybe most people seem to be.
 

California residence get a break from draconian laws for awhile
stock up while you have the option
 
Last edited:
if your having difficulty finding ammo even at inflated prices,
I read that in 2020 there were 5 million new first time gun buyers.
If each of those only bought one gun, and 50 rds...
That's 250 million new rounds of ammunition needed to meet the market demand.
I don't know anyone who only buys 50 cartridges at a time,
thats a single box of handgun cartridges:facepalm:
I tend to buy at least 200 cartridges or a case at a minimum
I know I and most of the guys I hunt with, buy powder in 5-8 lb bottles
and components in case lots of 500-1000 plus components,
like cases, primers or projectiles at a time.:like:
manufacturers and importers are trying to keep up with demand
from what I've seen lately , there's a steady and increasing market demand, lack of sales , well,
that's not likely to be an issue simply because even at the absurdly inflated prices being charged,
for ammo or components like projectiles, powder, cases and primers, the inventor is still selling briskly
damn near everything around here currently , is priced at double or more than it costs just 12-18 months ago,:swearing:
I hope prices return to near pre pandemic levels but that's very unlikely,
until the demand at current prices drops significantly
 
Last edited:
There's a significant increase in ammo price around here either. We are set for hunting this coming weekend right after we finish installing the suspension and tires from 4Wheelonlne onto the Wrangler and get the 300 rounds we ordered at the city where they sell cheaper.
 
a couple reasonably good deals/ prices on ammo at the current time,
if you can afford to,

ID SURE ADVISE YOU to stock up NOW!:like:






 
Last edited:
if your in the market for ammo
NOW ... IS THE TIME
TO GRAB WHAT YOU CAN AFFORD, TO BUY
AS PRICES WILL ONLY GET HIGHER:swearing::dull:
personally ID suggest you have no less than 500 cartridges.
in your personal inventory, per gun,:like:

MINIMUM
especially if you don't reload:facepalm:

if you do stock up on
BRASS,

PRIMERS,
POWDER
&
PROJECTILES

and
BULLET MOLDS

youll kick yourself if you ignore this advice in a couple years
 
Last edited:
I have 10,000 per weapon, not just caliber.
Nope, don't have enough, can never have too much ammo.
 
more money, more freedom, better tools, a larger shop,
good sex and more quality ammo,
access to more knowledgeable & skilled instruction,
more knowledge and better skills,
you'll have a hard time convincing me there's a point ,
you might not use a bit more, or better , in those categories
 
Last edited:

do yourself a favor and don.t even consider plastic magazines use, unless they have metal re-enforced feed lips and floor plates.
as the mag retention areas tend to wear out far faster than metal mags and in some cases heat or extreme cold reduce function.
feed lips expand or warp. metal mags generally have fewer issues
an any ar 15 clone and take the time and effort to clean , lube and reassemble the magazines you own, storing them loaded with maybe 2-3 cartridges less than full capacity won't hurt the spring tension even over decades in storage, especially if the loaded mags are stored in zip loc bags
in 50 caliber or 40mm ammo boxes in a cool dry environment.



Outside dimensions of the 40MM ammo can are Length 17.5 inches x Width 6 inches x Height 10 inches. Outside dimensions: Length 17 1/4 inches x Width 5 1/2 inches x Height 9 1/2 inches.
31ymIrrgubL._AC_.jpg
 
Last edited:
 
Last edited:
Back
Top