This video blew my mind. I think I'll stick to reloading my own ammo.
View: https://youtu.be/HZqNyCCpitU?si=gQALJIPP8SZ24eKb
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Was that the Hornady or Winchester Plant?This video blew my mind. I think I'll stick to reloading my own ammo.
View: https://youtu.be/HZqNyCCpitU?si=gQALJIPP8SZ24eKb
That was my first thought as well.You should have put a warning above the video that OSHA inspectors should not watch! That'd give one of them boys a heart attack! I'm particularly impressed with the precision powder measure they use.
That would be a Lee CLASSIC Loader. The standard loader needs dies.As you are watching this, think about the process of loading with a Lee Loader Kit! DR
An OSHA inspector would probably have a melt down.Yep, electro plating. I like how the wires are just free floating in the solution. It works but would give an engineer here in the states a heart attack!
They are cutting down 7.62 x 51 to make it into x 39. The copper plating process also greatly interested me, and is for Tokarev pistol bullets, locals call it 30 bore.In the first few minutes they were shortening what looks like 7.62x39 below the shoulder and re-necking it. Similar to the process of making 300 blackout out of 5.56x45. So what caliber are they making cases for?
I bet them Berdan primers are a beech.They are cutting down 7.62 x 51 to make it into x 39.
IIRC (been a few days since I watched) they were popping them out with a little punch/awl and hammer from outside the case, not trying to go through the flash holes.I bet them Berdan primers are a beech.