Website Updates 10-26-2020

We are one week out from the big move. The garage is looking cleaner, the house is looking emptier and we are counting down the days. It is going to be a big change for me, I’ve live in Utah for about 40% of my life. Basically all of my adult life, so moving to Texas is going to be a bit of an adjustment.

However this recent cold snap, has convinced me that maybe Texas will be a welcome change this time of year. Winter sure came on quick and it came on hard. It’s likely going to pick our route for us, while I am incline to go I-70 thru to Kansas and then hit I-35 south through Dallas, the recent winter storm is making me think perhaps going south through Arizona, New Mexico, and West Texas might be the better option. I’ve gone both routes, and I like sticking to the highways, but going over the continental divide towing a trailer, in a possible snow storm is not my preference. We will see.

We are trying to make a push to get moved prior to the election results being announced. I really do not want to have to drive through anywhere that people might be acting out there opinions over who won, and who lost. This means we will likely be hitting the road on Monday, and arriving to our destination east of College Station Tuesday evening. So there will likely be no update to the website next week, given that I wanted to take a moment to update it tonight.

In packing up much of my reloading stuff, I’ve come across many gems. One of them I posted to Instagram the other night. A Littleton Shotmaker. I bought it sometime in 2014, about the same time I bought my Benelli M4, and a Lee 1oz slug mold. The obvious thought here was that I was going to start churning out my own shotgun ammo. Well, I don’t think I loaded more then two or three dozen shells, and had several failures before I decided perhaps I’m not as into shot shell reloading as I am in metallic cartridge reloading.

A Littleton Shot Maker, that I believe I purchased from Magma Engineering. The drippers are set up to make 7 1/2 shot.

To be fair I will likely revisit the shot shell reloading hobby sometime in the future. However I do not know that I’ll fire up this shot maker unless I have something close to an unlimited source of lead. I felt like it took me at least 1/2 hour for the thing to start making shot, and then another 1/2 for it to make “Good” shot, and by the end of an hour I had run 20lbs of lead through the thing, and I had a hell of a time figuring out how to QA/QC the darn stuff. Clearly I need to spend some more time working with it, but at the end of the day I just don’t shoot enough shotgun shells to justify it.

Someone once offered to trade me a Colt HBAR for the shot maker. At the time the shot maker was too new. I was still convinced I just needed to spend a bit more time with it to justify the expense, I pass it up. Now in hindsight, I wish I had not. If you are someone who is decent at casting, would like to take on a bit of a challenge, and has a lot of time and lead on hand, you might think about emailing me. I might be convinced to part with this for the right deal.

Everyone has that story, where they wanted to take things to the next level, and then found out, maybe they were fine with the level they were at. Another conversation I have had with more then a few people is how much time and to what level of precision to prep brass with. I used to be there, where I wanted to get everything just right. Ever single case needed the exact same overall length, the powder had to be weighed out to the exact same charge, and the flash holes had to be completely burr free. If a case looked out of place, I lost all confidence that the batch would shoot well.

Working in the industry cured me of that mentality, quick. Brass could be +/- .005in on case length, bullet seating could be off as much as .010in from spec, and the charge weight’s could very as much as a grain but yet everything produced tight clover leaf groups. It almost became a curiosity as to what parameters were the most important in order to get accurate ammunition. In the end, I decided what was most important was a quality bullet, a good rifle, and good rifleman.

While we bicker over what will tighten a group up by .1in, the reality is, that is really difficult to measure. Bench rest shooters sometimes times win or lose by .01in, but that is not reflective of what our rifles, and what we as shooters can accomplish in most scenarios. Do we need honestly need to fret about that .002″ or .003″ variation in case length? I would argue no, but I know there is one thing at play here that is hard to measure. It’s a mental game to many people, a form of OCD. If they do not feel they have taken every measure to produce the best ammunition they feel they can produce, then as they line up on target, a little voice in the back of their head will say “That extra .2gr of powder is going to send this shot high.” The shot inevitably will go high by a .25 MOA, and you will never forgive yourself, regardless if the flyer was resultant of a 0.1% difference in charge or not.

That is all I have for thoughts this week. Just a reminder, my new email address is jay@theballisticassistant.com, if you forget, jayandrew338@gmail.com still is live. If you have a new load to submit, the sheet it found here. If you feel like saying “Hi” shoot me an email or check us out on Facebook.

Stay Frosty out there, and as always, stay safe.

The Ballistic Assistant

Website Updates 10-22-2020

Good Wednesday Evening,

Its been a busy few weeks. Three weeks ago I was unpacking things and planning for a reloading space. These past two weeks we’ve reversed course. Because we’re moving to Texas, I’ve had to develop four piles, the junk pile, the donate pile, the packing pile and the sell pile. Have to slim things down, renting a trailer is not cheap.

There has been some work in the background. I am in the works of starting a new business focusing on aerial surveying, and expanding some of the consulting work I’ve been doing for the metal/non metal mining industry. Part of this is developing a new website for the business which means I needed to upgrade the Bluehost account to accommodate a second website. This upgrade comes with an email domain. So I’ve changed my primary contact information for this website from jayandrew338@gmail.com to jay@theballisticassistant.com. It might take me a bit to update everything, but there will be a transition.

Both email accounts are live, so if you send something to either email you’ll get a response from me. I appreciate the feedback and the suggestions. Keep them coming.

Back to the topic of packing, how do you store your spent/prepped brass? For a long time I used gallon and 3 gallon bags. This worked for sometime until I had so much brass, I had to switch to tote. I bought a bunch of totes and tried to organize it all only to have to find space to put all the totes. The problem with plastic bags is the rip too easy, and the problem with totes is they take up a lot of space.

I’ve decided to use my vacuum sealer to store brass. The vacuum packing is overkill, but what isn’t is the the thickness of the bags. They are a bit thicker, and you can seal the brass in. The bags are easy to stack, and you can pick up the bag without fear of it ripping. No I don’t actually suck the air out of the bag, but I do press it out and then use the heat sealing function to seal the end of the bag. I know it’s a pain to open a bag and not be able to reseal it, but for brass that you don’t load for very often, or excess brass that you’ll rotate in at some point, it does seem to be the best of both worlds.

.408 Cal jackets that I purchased from RCE when they had their close out sale. I’ll draw these down into .338 jackets. In the meantime I sealed them up for safe storage.

As I’ve been packing, I was able to find my stash of primers. As such, I am open to trades, I know what I got so no haggling. I’m looking for a Barret M107 with accompanying suppressor. No suppressor no deal. 😛

I know, these things are like hens teeth right now. I have far to many large rifle magnum primers.

Thanks for the messages of support. We are looking forward to this move and the new challenges and opportunities that it will bring. As always you can reach out to us at Facebook, check us out on Instagram, or now email us at jay@theballisticassistant.com.

Stay Safe Out There!

The Ballistic Assistant

Website Updates 10-12-2020

Good Monday Evening!

2020 has proven to be a crazy year, and as you know I have not been spared. A broken ankle, a job change, a move, and now a second move. Yes, just as I was getting settled in, we received some bad news. My wife’s father is not doing so well, so we have decided to move closer to her parents to help care for him.

This will be quite the move for us. We are currently located in Cedar City, Utah. We’ll be moving to someplace in eastern Texas. This means we have to downsize quite a bit. Since we want to be down there for the holidays, the timeline is a bit compressed. Obviously this is not something I planned on or was expecting but the last week has been a whirlwind.

All of this means I will be slow providing any sort of updates until after I can get everyone moved. If loads are submitted I’ll make sure they get uploaded to the spreadsheet promptly, however there won’t be much else I can do.

As always, you can reach out to me at jayandrew338@gmail.com. If you want to submit a load the submission form is here. You can check me out on Instagram here, or you can join the conversation on our Facebook page.

Stay safe and good luck to all those hunters!

The Ballistic Assistant

Website Updates 10-5-2020

It’s the first Monday in October!

I fully admit my two favorite seasons are spring and fall. Temperatures are usually pretty moderate which makes it a perfect time for some casting. Unfortunately I’m not sure I’m going to get much of that done this fall. Not with all the unpacking and organizing of the garage.

The big update this week, is really a small update. A friend of mine sent me the results for his deer and elk load. If you are wanting to know how IMR 4166 performs with a 165gr Nosler Partition out of a Ruger American Predator Rifle chambered in 308 Win, the load is in the database. The barrel length was 18in, and he reported it consistently shooting some very tight groups.

In other news I scored a calibration weight set. This weight set isn’t quite complete, but it is miles ahead of my current weight set. So I am glad to add it to my collection. Weight sets like these are good additions to the reloading bench as it allows you the check your scales. The weights that come with the scales are not always the highest quality. While this set is missing a few of it’s weights it will be fine for my use.

This is an expensive set, unfortunately it’s missing a few standards, perhaps I’ll order them to fill in the gaps, or I’ll leave it be. The lab was getting rid of it as they didn’t have the paper work to certify the standards.

In industry news, there are several ammunition manufacturers reporting backorders out to May 2021. With one small manufacturer in Arizona reporting more then $80 Million in back orders. If there was ever a time to be glad you were a hand loader, now might be it. Though, I know components are tricky to find right now, still, at least you have some ability to adapt to the market, try some new powders, or perhaps try your hand at casting.

Depending on how the election goes, we might not see a return to normal for sometime. It took probably a year to 18 months before inventory came back after the 2012 rush. Even then prices were never quite back where people were used to prior to the rush. It will be interesting to see if the industry is repeating the same mistake it made in 2016. In the months leading up to the 2016 election wholesalers stocked their warehouses anticipating a Hillary win. Instead Trump won, and the bottom fell out of the market overnight.

I wouldn’t say they were giving away ammunition, but it resulted in a market correction. A lot of small Mom and Pop shops that were making AR-15 parts with their garage CNC operations disappeared post election. The industry had treated the Obama bubble as the new normal, and well, it wasn’t. Things in the ammo world are hopping right now, and if things keep going the way they are at my current job, I might start looking to get back in. We will see.

That is the update for this week. If you’d like to submit your loads, please check out the Load Submission Form here. If you’d like to share pictures of your trophy buck, email them here, jayandrew338@gmail.com. If you want to see what I’m up to, I try and post my unfiltered life to Instagram. Lastly, if you want to join the conversation, you can look us up on Facebook.

Thanks for subscribing, stay safe out there, and good luck on the hunts!

The Ballistic Assistant