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What does this cartridge do that others currently do not?
It offers plenty of advantages like longer casing life, ease of reloading, higher efficiency, to name a few...
And I know it hasn't been done before, so I'm really just looking how to bring it to market...
It offers plenty of advantages like longer casing life, ease of reloading, higher efficiency, to name a few...
And I know it hasn't been done before, so I'm really just looking how to bring it to market...
I think the patent would be a good way, to protect my intellectual property, but I also want it to sell/spread like wildfire, so my friend said I want to get it SAAMI spec...
Anyone have experience in this regard...?
In order for an invention to be patentable it must be new as defined by patent law. An invention cannot be patented if:
The invention was known or used by others in the United States, or patented or described in a printed publication in the United States or a foreign country, before the current applicant filed for his or her patent. Someone else has made the same invention as you did.
The invention was patented or described in a printed publication in this or a foreign country or in public use or on sale in this country more than one year prior to the application for patent in the United States. You or somebody else revealed your invention more than a year ago to the public.
Right now the biggest success in the high power rifle calibers is probably .338 lapua because of it's adoption by military snipers. Suddenly everyone wants to play military sniper, even though the .338 remington ultramag outperforms it by about 10%.
Maybe not play "military sniper" but might like the fact that shooting "military calibers" tends to be less expensive than shooting "exotic's". From the Surplus or "overrun" ammo that often is available to the availability of brass from de-mil contractors, shooting a military caliber is much cheaper and just as much fun. As for having a special cartridge for hunting????? Game Animals still get killed quite well by old 30-30's, 30-06's, and for that matter even old 45-70's.
Heh, if you see any military contract production overrun .338 lapua let me know, I'll buy all of it for resale. .338lapua is getting over $100/box in most places, the lowly .338 RUM goes for about $80.
get me reloadable casing that can be easily picked up with a magnet for the sake of easier cleanup after a long session of shooting
Thanks for all the input guys, I'm still trying to decide...
Not having the means to get anything more than the initial provisional patent, would you-
1) Just produce your casing and hope people choose to ONLY buy it from you?
2) Hold out, patent, then produce?
3) Seek a loan to do option 2?
-K