Brass, Barrels, and Bureaucracy #2

The past week started off being hotter than the dickens. We reached 95+ degrees both Monday and Tuesday. The heat wave broke for us on Tuesday and when it broke it went in the complete opposite direction. Temperatures dropped into the high 60’s / low 70’s during the day and would dip down to the low 50’s in the evening.  A full week later and this must be the coolest week of July 4th that I can remember.

Personally, I love the cool weather, I very much wish this was about the norm for summers. I really need to track down somewhere I can let off a few rounds. I have new loads to test and rifles to sight in. The weather is about as perfect as you can ask for now.

Website Updates

I have been working on cleaning up the website. We wanted to guide it back to focus on reloading, shooting, and gunsmithing. What didn’t fit in the that rubric I am working on moving to an archival page. Frequent visitors are going to see changes over the next few weeks

We also built a new page for short and sweet articles offering tips, tricks and advice for handloaders called “The Handloaders Corner”.  Many of the articles that Marc has been writing are posting there. I have a few in the work as well.

Speaking of articles, Marc’s new article went live, see below:

Time at the Bench

Tumbler Woes

My tumbler finally gave up the ghost. I mentioned before I could hear it starting to bog down. At the time I thought perhaps it was a bearing beginning to seize. Well in comical fashion I ran it for a bit to “charge” my media and it suddenly stalled.  It did not recover.

These things are well worth the money

The comedy of it was not that the tumbler stalled, it was why I was charging the media. I hate listening to the tumbler “growl” so I picked up a programmable switch. I scheduled the time I wanted it to run from 2am to 4am. I figured that no one would be awake. When I put brass in the tumbler, I’d schedule the run on an app on my phone. This has worked pretty darn well. It keeps me from over tumbling, which breaks down the media without adding additional shine or cleanliness, and I don’t have to listen to it.

Well, the last couple of batches didn’t get as clean or as shiny as I would like. So, I figured the media was breaking down. It seemed kind of fast to me, the media was not that old. So, I started looking into what I could do to squeeze some extra life out of it. It was during this that the tumbler stalled out and I thought perhaps it was stalling out at night. I mentioned it to my wife, who is a night owl. Turns out, there is someone awake at 2am, and that someone was startled not once but twice, two days in a row, when the tumbler suddenly kicked on. Long story short, my media is fine…but the tumbler is not so I tore into it hoping it was an easy fix.

The bearing on the left, is good, the one on the right, not so much. The bearing isn’t seized but it doesn’t rotate freely as the shield has been beaten into the races. The issue is in the housing; a raised lip beat the snot out of the shield. Given that I have had this tumbler for 10+ years, it’s probably due to a new set of bearings. A package of ten was about $6 on Amazon.  Took me about an hour to get everything replaced and cleaned up.

I ran it for a bit, and it would drop RPM’s and then pick back up again. The next day it went back to the “Turn on, jerk then buzz”. At this point I believe the motor is just done. It is a shaded pole motor, and I could replace it. I bought the tumbler back when it was a kit that Cabela’s sold. It’s a Berry’s 400 with Cabela’s branding.  I might drop an email to Berry’s see if they can sell me a motor, (and a new lid mine is cracked to high heaven), and if not, I may look to upgrade. I do like the Thumler’s Tumblers but they seem to be out of stock everywhere and are price at the high end of my budget. We will see.

Close Quarters Reloading

It’s been several years since I have been able to get my microscope and camera all set up. That happened yesterday, so you’ll be seeing close up shots of all sorts of things.

The two pictures above were taken with the set up. The top case is the same in both photos, while the bottom case on the left-hand photo was deburred using a traditional case deburring tool, which I hate. The photo on the right is a case which was deburred with a counter sink blade shown in the photo below.

This blade is very sharp but works very well. Takes a very minimal effort to knock the burr off and leaves a nice edge break behind. For me the best part is there is no “Squeal” which I find grating. Below are images magnified by 300x to really show the edge of the case mouth.  The image on the left was done with the counter sink blade, while the image on the right was done with a traditional OD deburr tool.

Is there a practical difference? Not really. That more or less what I was curious about. I do like the ergonomics of the deburring tools used in more traditional machine shops, so I am going to continue to experiment with them. I have plenty of brass that needs a trim.

Industry and Legislative News

Hearing Protection Act (HPA) & Stop Harassing Owners of Rifles and Tools (SHORT) Act

This has been a whirlwind of news lately.  Far too much to cover in detail in this short section. I’ll give you the summary and if you want more I have gone into greater detail in this write-up.

Bottomline, both the HPA and the SHORT Act remain in President’s Trumps Big Beautiful Bill as of 6/30/2025. However the wording has changed, it was determined that the Senate could not pass a bill that removed items from the National Firearms Act (NFA) by the Senate parliamentarian. However, it could zero out the $200 tax stamp for suppressors, SBR’s, SBS’s, and “Any other weapons” AOW from the NFA.

At this point it is completely speculative on how the ATF will handle the paperwork. Since no tax is being paid, you really can’t call it a “Tax” Stamp. A registration stamp? Regardless, the ATF could also change the Code of Federal Regulations and make it far easier to obtain NFA items not requiring a Tax Stamp. There is no congressional mandate for people to be fingerprinted, or a requirement for notification to a Chief Law Enforcement Officer.  This is all the machinations of a bureaucracy looking to make the process painful.  We can hope that with the current administration, proper pressure can be applied to the ATF to change the rules and lessen the burden.

I doubt we will see the NFA registry completely disappear through any action of congress. There are not 60 votes in the senate to get the legislation passed. However, with the tax removed, there is a fair constitutional argument that the vestigial remains of the NFA no longer are constitutional as it no longer falls under the congressional powers of taxation. That will take years to work its way through the courts and may become moot the next time the Democrats have both the Congress and the Presidency. You can rest assured that they will try to put that tax right back in place, and it’s not going to be $200

New Guns and Gear

Magpul UCS

Magpul recently announced the release of the UCS Stock. It is designed to attach rifles that have a 1913 Picatinny rail on the rear of the receiver. This could be an MP5 or G33, some AK variants, the popular CZ Scorpion, or an MSR rifle with a modified bolt that allows folding stocks. Of course it comes in the 3 most popular colors, black, tan, and olive green, my descriptions not theirs.  

I like most of what Magpull offers. I’ve had sights, stocks, magazines, grips and all sorts of stuff from them. I haven’t ever been disappointed. It’s reliable and tough.  I could see this going on that new SBR I might build if a certain tax get’s zeroed out.

That is all we have this week.

Jay & Marc

The Ballistic Assistant is a website dedicated to the art of handloading and shooting. We aim to share tips on reloading and shooting, inform others on what’s going on in the firearms community, and provide our opinion and thoughts on firearms related news and events. If you like what you read, we only ask that you subscribe and share with a friend or two.

If you have questions, comments, or ideas, we’d love to hear from you.

Jay – jay@theballisticassistant.com

Marc –Marc@theballisticassistant.com

Brass, Barrels, and Bureaucracy #1

Make sure you’re storing you ammo in places your are comfortable sitting for long periods. Periods of extreme heat, can change the performance.

New England is getting a taste of Texas this week. It’s supposed to top out at 97 degrees, which is downright miserable. I have lived in a lot of different areas in the United States. It is interesting to see how different regions make fun of other regions. Places that get lots of snow will mock places the get shut down over a flurry. Likewise, places with 90% humidity and 90-degree heat will laugh at northerners complaining about a few hot days. At the end of the day, northerners do not have central AC but have tons of snowplows, which is pretty much the exact opposite of the southerners. I have determined it is far more about the equipment then it is the people.  

No fishing this past weekend, so my catch ratio remains unchanged.

Website Updates

As you may have noticed we are trying a different format for these updates. My original intent was to publish a weekly post highlighting new articles and tools on the site. This has morphed into a weekly newsletter of sorts that goes beyond just reporting on the website.

Since the purpose of these updates have changed we felt it was best to handle them differently. Hence the new title and a issue number. Marc and I will continue to keep our ears to the ground and provide industry news, and commentary, we’re just going to structure it a bit differently. We hope for the better.

Time at the Bench

I have been working on prepping brass and experimenting with a few new things just to see how they work. As most handloaders know, trimming brass tends to leave a burr on both the inside and outside of the case mouth. One of my least favorite things about the process is the OD deburr as it just squeals and feels miserable. So, I decided to try something new.

I have used one more times then i can count but have never tried one on brass until now…

I started playing around with deburring tools used in machine shops to see how well they might work. Honestly, I was very impressed. The cutters are very sharp, and the ergonomics are a bit better. It looks like it would be awkward to use, but it knocks out that inside burr with one rotation. There is a similar attachment for the OD deburr. It takes very light pressure to trim away the burrs and leaves a very consistent edge break. I am going to play with it some more but if it’s something I end up liking I may do a future write up.  

This right here, should be banned

The one thing that always causes me a bit of annoyance is when a case uses two different primer sizes. 45 ACP typically has a large pistol primer, but it is not uncommon to find brass that uses a small primer pocket. That is apparently true for 7.62×39, which I have been working through this week. I get why companies do it, at the end of the day both rounds perform fine with their smaller primers. The cost of a small rifle primer when compared to a large one is small, but not zero. Margins on ammunition are notoriously small, so anything a company can do to increase margin they will. Still bugs the hell out of me though.  

Industry and Legislative News

Hearing Protection Act

The provisions currently remain in the Senate bill to remove suppressors from the NFA entirely. Current events have put a damper on a lot of the conversation around the “Big Beautiful Bill”, which I think is a good thing. The quieter the public discourse, the better its odds of passing, in my view.

Stop Harassing Owners of Rifles and Tools (SHORT) Act

Possibly the most exciting news of the week is the inclusion of the SHORT act in the Big Beautiful Bill. This bill removes Short Barrel Rifles and Short Barrel Shotguns from the NFA. This had been a provision that was in the original House bill but was removed and was not adopted in the final version of the bill that was passed to the Senate.

Well, the Senate added it back into their version of the bill. If it passes the Senate, the two different versions will need to be reconciled and approved by both before it can reach the president’s desk.

I have a 300 Blackout Shorty that I would really like to build, and of course that build needs a suppressor.

Frank Brownell’s Passing

Frank Royce Brownell III, longtime leader of Brownells Inc. and a prominent advocate for the Second Amendment, passed away on June 18, 2025, at the age of 85 after a lengthy illness. Frank joined the family business in 1965 and played a pivotal role in expanding it into one of the most recognized names in the firearms industry. He served as President starting in 1983 and later as CEO and Chairman of the Board, guiding the company through decades of growth while promoting the craft of gunsmithing and supporting the shooting community.

Beyond his business leadership, Frank was deeply committed to protecting gun rights and fostering education within the firearms world. He helped establish the NRA Business Alliance and was a familiar face at industry events like the SHOT Show and NRA Annual Meetings. A generous philanthropist, Frank supported youth shooting sports, conservation, and gunsmithing scholarships. He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and son Pete Brownell, who continues the family’s legacy of advocacy and innovation.

New Guns and Gear

Sig 211-GTO

I am not gunna lie, I think it is a handsome looking gun.

This year probably should be the year of the 2011, 1911 Double Stack (DS). Pretty much every major pistol manufacturer seems to be coming out with one. Sig was clever in its name. 2011 is a trademarked term licensed to Staccato and staccato protects that aggressively. Sig just dropped the zero.  I think Staccato is a bit overly ambitious in protecting its trademark. At this point it has become a colloquial term for double stack 1911’s. Kind of like Kleenex is to tissue paper.

Serious question, if we retain some design elements from a DS 1911, but do our own thing, is it still in the DS1911 family…like a second cousin twice removed type thing?

The Sig 211-GTO has a very nice look and has some nice features. However, it departs from the traditional 2011 or 1911 design quite a bit. Ambidextrous slide release, drop safe (more on this later), external extractor, changes both to the guide rods, reverse plugs and barrels. This is to say that this isn’t a firearm that is going to be compatible with other parts. It is its own beast, and it makes me ask the question, is it truly a double stack 1911, or have they departed so far from the John Moses Browning design that it should be removed from the family all together?

To be completely fair, Sig, to my knowledge, is not marketing it as a 1911 DS, but the market is comparing it to other 1911 DS on the market. This has been the most humorous part of the whole thing. Sig really stepped on it with what was an issue of P320 discharging when dropped. Not only did they not handle the issue particularly well, but their PR firm keeps it top of the news and cannot seem to let it drop.  It’s that friend who made that one mistake that you and all your other buddies refuse to let them forget. Everyone knows Sig Sauer makes a top tier product, but it’s just too much fun to keep needling them on it.

It probably won’t be long before I am able to get my hands on one, I look forward to testing it. Retail is expected to be around $2400

That is all we have for this week. We will be keeping a close eye on the news with bated breath to see where this Big Beautiful Bill goes. Now’s the time to really apply some pressure to your legislators. Call, Text, Email, send Ravens, whatever it is you use to communicate.

Jay & Marc

The Ballistic Assistant is a website dedicated to the art of handloading and shooting. We aim to share tips on reloading and shooting, inform others on what’s going on in the firearms community, and provide our opinion and thoughts on firearms related news and events. If you like what you read, we only ask that you subscribe and share with a friend or two.

If you have questions, comments, or ideas, we’d love to hear from you.

Jay – jay@theballisticassistant.com

Marc –Marc@theballisticassistant.com

Website Updates 6-16-2025

A belated Happy Father’s Day to everyone out there who may be reading this.  This weekend was beautiful, rained for a moment early AM on Saturday but the rest of the day was perfect. We tried again to go fishing, and we saw bluegill swimming around in the shallows. The kids were very excited and determined that today was going to be the day. Alas, it was not. We had bites and nibbles, I hooked one, then lost it. That makes five weekends we have been skunked.  Really think I might need to stick to reloading, this fishing business is giving me the run for my money.

Website Updates and New Stuff

Marc’s post, “Power of a Post-it Note” went live this week.  This will be the first of (what we hope to be) many small but simple things that can be done at the bench to make reloading safer, and more enjoyable for everyone. If you haven’t seen it, you can find the article here.

Much of the recent work has been behind the scenes, so most people won’t notice or see anything appreciable change but there are things in the works. We will announce as we launch or as things are ready to go live.

Time At the Bench

I have spent a bunch of quality time with an L.E Wilson trimmer and trimming brass. As anyone who has spent any amount of time trimming brass by hand knows, it sucks. There’s just no two ways about it. There is a lot of reasons why the Worlds Finest Trimmer, the Giraud Trimmer, and the various versions and knock offs have become so popular. The aim is to get through it all as fast and as painless as possible.

One thing I have always found a little bit cumbersome, and by a little bit, I do mean just a smidge, is measuring the cartridge length before and after trimming. I feel like when I needed to measure brass I pulled it off the trimmer, knocked it out of the case holder, then had to give it a little wiggle as I closed the caliper jaws to get everything square and have confidence in the reading.

This got me looking for a “better” way. By better, really just looking for something that was a tad less cumbersome. I played around with a granite comparator stand, some gage blocks and a dial indicator and came up with something that works quite well. For me it is both faster and less awkward to make quick spot checks to make sure I am trimming the case back each time.

The basic set up is pictured above. I use a dial indicator, in this case a SPI indicator 0 to 1/4  travel. Screw on a 1in diameter foot, which can be purchased from McMaster, and gauge blocks which are stacked to equal my target trim length.

 I zero the indicator on the gauge blocks and push them aside. It then becomes very easy to swipe a case under the foot and take a measurement. The reading is a comparative measurement to the gauge blocks and will let me know if I am .002 from the target trim length, if I am one or zero.  You don’t need the gage blocks, you could trim a case to the length that you want, verified by a caliper check, and then zero off that.

I have found it to be a very quick and easy check and faster than checking with calipers.

Industry and Legislative News

Hearing Protection Act

40+ Firearm Advocacy groups have all signed on to a letter urging the delisting of Suppressors from the NFA. There looks to be strong Republican support, but there are some moderate republicans that have signaled they are not solid “yes” votes.  Of course, every democrat is solidly against the notion with several prominent democrats outright lying that there is no valid legal use for suppressors.

We should expect to have news within the next week if the HPA will be included in Trump’s “Big, Beautiful Bill”. This is being passed through the Budget and Reconciliation process which only requires a majority support. Currently the Senate is made up of 52 Republicans, 51 is needed for its passage. So we can afford to lose one, with Vice President JD Vance available to break a 50–50 tie

ATF – Changing the Rules Again?

There has been a lot of scuttlebutt about the ATF possibly changing its rules when it comes to the “Pin and Weld” method of permanently attaching a muzzle device. When I first came across this, I am a firm believer in the Bongino rule.

           “Wait 24 to 72 hours before believing any breaking news story.”

What Happened?

What we know is that the Gun Owners of America (GOA) filed a Freedom of Information Request (FOIA) which exposed an internal incident occurring in 2021, where an ATF Firearms Tech branch agent, Eve E. Eisenbice, dismantled a pinned-and-welded muzzle device from an imported Beretta handgun using a vise and breaker bar. After breaking it, the agent deemed the installation “not permanent”.

The question has been raised as to whether this will elicit a policy change from the ATF.

Who Is Eve Eisenbice?

Eve E. Eisenbice is, to put it bluntly, a nut case. One that I hope this administration decides to fire as she has a history of making extreme or absurd legal claims. Among her past assertions

  • Pillows and potatoes can function as suppressors (and are thus regulated as such provided that you intend to use them as such)
  • Check Rests constitute a stock
  • Metal Water bottles could be used to manufacture a firearm and thus could be considered a firearm.
  • Threaded titanium tubes could be considered suppressors by virtue of their features

Why This Story Took Off   

This isn’t the first time the ATF has been accused of pushing boundaries. Historically, they’ve leaned on Chevron Deference, a legal precedent that gave administrative agencies wide latitude in interpreting regulations, even beyond their statutory authority.

Chevron Deference was overturned on June 28, 2024, which weakens the ATF’s ability to impose sweeping rule changes without clear legislative backing.

So, does this mean the ATF won’t keep trying? Not likely. But it does mean they’re less likely to succeed when challenged in court.

Is a Policy Change Coming?

No formal policy change has been proposed. One rogue agent with a history of overreach destroyed a barrel (not a firearm under federal law) and claimed that somehow invalidated the entire concept of a permanent muzzle attachment.

If the ATF intended to act on this, they would’ve done so in 2022 when they had more leeway. That they didn’t suggests they viewed Eisenbice’s findings as fringe—and not legally defensible.

What’s Really Going On?

This story has been heavily sensationalized, especially by GOA and several YouTube channels, many of which have used it as a fundraising vehicle. That’s what bothers me more than anything.

The ATF is going to do what the ATF always does. But I expect more from those who represent our industry, namely more honesty, less fear-mongering.

Anderson Mfg Closing its Doors

The last bit of news: Anderson Manufacturing is closing down. disappointing, but not entirely surprising.

While best known for budget AR-15 lowers, Anderson had expanded into full rifle builds and even released a Glock-style pistol in recent years.

The industry is currently in what I’d call “Trump Slump 2.0.” It’s not as dramatic as the first one, but market conditions have tightened. The modern sporting rifle segment, ARs in particular, is especially competitive, with players like Palmetto State Armory dominating on price and marketing.

Companies like Anderson, Del-Ton, and others are either shutting down or scaling back. The powder shortage continues, and the broader economy isn’t helping when it comes to disposable income.

New Guns and Gear

There was not anything new that caught either myself or Marc’s eyes. So we’re going to skip this section this week.

We hope everyone has a good week and we’ll catch you next Monday.

Jay & Marc

The Ballistic Assistant is a website dedicated to the art of handloading and shooting. We aim to share tips on reloading and shooting, inform others on what’s going on in the firearms community, and provide our opinion and thoughts on firearms related news and events. If you like what you read, we only ask that you subscribe and share with a friend or two.

If you have any questions, comments or ideas we would love to hear from you, contact info is provided below.

Jay – jay@theballisticassistant.com

Marc –Marc@theballisticassistant.com

Website Update 6-9-2025

Monday always sneaks up faster than it should. It has been a very wet spring; we are on the fourth weekend straight of rain. No fishing this weekend, just rain.  That’s fine, more time at the loading bench.

Website Updates and New Stuff

This week we are welcoming Marc as a contributor to the site. He and I worked closely together doing product development at a previous employer. He brings with him a wealth of wisdom when it comes to reloading (and life), much of it practical know how that it was done before the age of the internet.

To introduce Marc, we have updated the “About Us Page

We are working on a landing page for him but expect to see practical tips and tricks in reloading that get lost in the internet noise.  His first article can be found here.

How the Internet Almost Blew Up My Gun

I am working on a few things on the website, trying to get formatting and stuff to look right on Mobile. If you see some things that are off or just plain annoying on a mobile screen, I am working on trying to fix those.

Time at the Bench

As before, I have been working on getting caught up on my reloading. Sorting brass, depriming, cleaning, checking case length, annealing necks. It’s a chore; personally, I find it somewhat satisfying and a good way to unwind in the evening. This week it was about processing some 308 Win and 45 ACP. 

My vibratory tumbler survived another week, though the motor stalled out once. It picked back up again a moment later, no magic smoke so we’ll let it ride.

I have got a few things in the mail, case holders for my L.E Wilson trimmer, and the Lee Ram Prime, for priming some of the tight primer pockets. For $20 bucks I think this little tool is well worth it.  

Industry and Legislative News

Hearing Protection Act

There has been no meaningful movement on the Hearing Protection Act. It remains in the Senate, and right now there is quite a bit of drama going on over this bill. No so much regarding the Hearing Protection Act, but the amounts of taxes, spending, ect. That drama has been all over the news, so I do not think I need to touch on it here. However, I am, like many of you, waiting with bated breath to see if this thing survives.

Supreme Court Rulings

The Supreme Court tossed the lawsuit that had been brought by Mexico against 14 different gun companies. Essentially accusing them of making their arms easy to traffic and blaming them for the violence South of the Border. This whole case was a shame to begin with, something dreamed up by Gun Control Groups and politicians. The court ruled that the “Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act” shielded the gun companies from this frivolous lawsuit.

Last week we were disappointed in the courts, this week we are applauding them. That seems to be the nature of things. Alan, one of our subscribers put a plug in for a good resource on the Supreme Court and other legal news. 4 Boxes Diner on YouTube, the host Mark Smith, is a constitutional attorney and really does a good job breaking things down.

Abolish the ATF?

There has been a bit of buzz about the possibility of the ATF being rolled up in the DEA while no formal plan has been submitted, the rumors seem to be an attempt to float the idea prior to a specific policy proposal. What a nightmare that will be. The DEA is probably the worst three letter agency when it comes to constitutional rights. They believe heavily in civil forfeiture and regularly abuse this power.

The last thing we need is the DEA to expand its jurisdiction to firearms. This would be my one critique of the “Abolish the ATF” movement. We can all agree that the ATF is an unconstitutional infringement on the 2A. However, we sometimes overlook that the government rarely gives up power, there will be something that fills the vacuum, and whatever that is may be, far worse than what we were dealing with.

Remember….

“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard.”
— H. L. Mencken, A Little Book in C Major, 1916

In this light, maybe we are better off remembering the wisdom in old Irish proverb “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.”

New Guns and Gear

Barrett Firearms

Personally, I have always really liked Barrett Firearms Manufacturing, the firearms company. They are a modern story of one man, Ronnie Barrett, with an idea that he took that and built a company around it. The cool part is that idea resulting in the Barrett M82/M107. They have been working on what can only be described as a love child between the M107 and the M203.  

Figure 1:Barrett & MARS Inc. 30 mm Precision Grenadier System (PGS)

I vote this as the firearm most definitely going to be included in the next Call of Duty, if it hasn’t been already. It launches 30mm grenades which are programmable for air burst. Of course, designed to engage units which are behind cover, it also doubles as anti-drone as the rounds are programmable.  This was a joint project between Barrett and Montana based MARS, Inc. The official news is that this beat out the FN submission in the xTech Soldier Lethality competition, which does not guarantee adoption, but it does look like it is headed in that direction.

25x59mmB Grenade (Dummy)

This is not Barrett’s first time in the “larger than .50 Cal” In the early 2000’s I remember reading about the 25x59mm XM109 which was designed to be an large bore upper for the 107. It was a programmable grenade launcher. However, it never made its way past the prototype stage.  No doubt much of the lessons learn in that were used in this most recent venture. Sometimes that’s how the development cycle goes.

Trigger Tech

Trigger Tech is releasing their new Glock Trigger this week (June 10th 2025). Called the ACE Trigger system, it is a little bit different than your typical drop in Glock Trigger.  Trigger Tech has completely redesigned the trigger system to deliver a 1911 like trigger in a Glock.

It looks like it may retail for about $280 at your favorite dealer. Personally, I am a big fan of trigger tech, every time I have tried their triggers, they seem to be top notch. Sometimes it’s not about buying a new gun but making an existing gun better. An aftermarket trigger is a really good way to make your favorite gun feel like a whole different animal.

Personally, I am not a big fan of Glocks, so this trigger won’t help me much. Here’s hoping that expand this line for H&K VP Pistols. I’d really love to see a trigger for a VZ-58 (I am dreaming now).  Regardless I have a couple of their triggers in a few AR’s, and I am very happy with them.

That’s what we have for this week.

We’d love to hear your thoughts or answer any questions you have,

Jay & Marc

jay@theballisticassistant

marc@theballisticassistant.

Website Update 6/2/2025

Good Monday evening!

Overall, it has been a very wet and cold spring in the upper northeast. I’ve been setting aside a few hours each Saturday to take one of my kids fishing on Lake Champlain. It’s supposed to offer pretty good fishing, but so far, we haven’t had a single verifiable bite, let alone landed a fish. I have been watching all the YouTube videos and reading everything I can to remedy the situation.  I’ve learned a lot, various knots, rigging techniques, and the differences between a square-bill and regular crankbait, as well as a spinning reel and a baitcaster, but it hasn’t paid off yet.

I walk into the fishing aisle, and I’m still lost. It reminds me of how I felt when I first got into shooting and reloading, and how a newbie might feel. I think the internet these days does more to confuse people than to help.

Website Updates and New Stuff

This week we have a few website updates that went live. I have finished updating the SAAMI Rifle Catalog. SAAMI has added about half a dozen or so cartridges in the last three years. I have updated the catalog to include these.  This catalog is meant to be a quick glance at some important dimensions such as the max case length, the trim-to-length, and the SAAMI MAP pressure, sometimes referred to as the service pressure. I will be going through a similar exercise on the pistol, shotshell and rimfire catalogs in the coming weeks.

The updated SAAMI Rifle Catalog can be found here.

I have also done a deep dive in the 8.6 Blackout. This is something that I have wanted to do ever since it was announced at the 2022 SHOT Show. I had planned on starting out by comparing the 338 Spectre, 338 ARC and the 8.6 Blackout, however as I began to write it, I realized that just telling the story of the 8.6 Blackout was enough. I plan on circling back and doing a 338 ARC and 338 Spectre comparison at some point in the near future but for now I hope this write up on the 8.6 Blackout is a worthwhile read. 

The article is under Jay’s Commentaries, and is linked here: An Honest Look at the 8.6 Blackout

Time at the Bench

This week I have been wrapping up some 30-06 loading I had started about a week and a half ago. As previously mentioned it is not too exciting of a load, really, I would like to spend more time at the range practicing the fundamentals of shooting then trying to develop the perfect load.  

I have also been doing quite a bit of brass cleaning. I have tried pretty much everything under the sun when it comes to cleaning brass. I keep coming back to the dry tumbling method. The tumbler I have been using and abusing for probably 12 years now, might be starting to die. You can hear the RPM’s of the motor suddenly drop and then recover a few seconds later. Maybe I’ll tear into it, hopefully it is a failing bearing.

In terms of what tumbler, I’ll buy to replace it, that is up for some debate. The one I have was sold by Cabela’s, I doubt it is still made. I will freely admit I was looking at the Harbor Freight models and wondering how they might hold up. Overall, I would like something about the same size, maybe a touch bigger, but would like something quieter.  I know Harbor Freight can be a mixed bag.

Marc and I bought a Harbor Freight dual drum rock tumbler when we were doing some wet media testing. I personally was a big fan of it. We could clean a bunch of brass quickly, allowing us to try out different additives and different tumbling media. The small size of the containers made it easy to load and unload. Something that I really am not a big fan of when it comes to the larger wet tumblers. I would recommend it to someone who is just starting out reloading and is on budget.

Industry and Legislative News

We are all waiting with bated breath to see what happens to the Hearing Protection Act in the Senate. I have not heard of any meaningful movement on this. So, keep pushing on your senators.

Supreme Court Ruling

The news broke today that the Supreme Court has declined to hear two cases regarding the constitutionality of laws regulating “high-capacity magazines” and assault weapon bans. In both instances the circuit courts upheld the state laws, which lead to appeals to the Supreme Court. The rejection of the appeals means the lower court’s ruling stands.  

It’s easy to say that a rejection by the Supreme Court is a loss for Gun Right as a whole. I tend to take the middle road. When a Supreme Court ruling is given, it is supposed to set a precedent for the lower courts to follow (Or Ignore in the cases of Heller and Bruen). What we absolutely don’t want is an unfavorable precedent set. If the justices realize they don’t have the votes for a favorable outcome, I’d rather see the case rejected.

Maybe I’m stretching to see the glass as half full, but politics is messy, and it’s rarely as cut and dried as we might like. Again, it’s not the outcome we wanted, but it is preferable to the alternative.

Texas

As per usual we see laws being pushed on the state level. In Texas they are working to change how they regulate Short Barrel Rifles. In short, they are stripping the language from the State law that mirrors the Federal laws. This does not change a whole lot for Texan gunowners unless SBRs are removed from the NFA, however it does clear the path for Texans if this does happen.

The most interesting piece of legislation to come out of Texas is the banning of municipalities and state funded organizations from holding so called gun buy back programs. To me this has been a scam preying on ignorance. By turning in a firearm, you got a $50, sometimes up to a $100 gift card often times at the taxpayers expense. No questions asked. The firearms would then be destroyed. While it was fun to watch entrepreneurial gun owners craft their own firearms and capitalize on the stupidity of the whole thing, the real harm was done to those people who had a firearm worth far more than a $100 gift card. I suppose you could call it the “stupid tax”.

Connecticut

While we are winning some battles on the state and federal level we are losing some ground in some states as well. Last week we mentioned what in effect would be a ban on Glocks in California. This week it is in Connecticut where we are seeing laws passed that encourage companies and municipalities to file lawsuits against firearm companies who do not enact reasonable controls to prohibit criminals from purchasing or obtaining a firearm.  The “Reasonable Controls” definition is left purposefully vague.  This legislation has been enacted in 8 other states, so it is not novel or new.

New Guns and Gear

Dillon Auto Center Decapping Die

Dillon Precision has released a new decapping die. As far as I can tell it is functionally identical to the FW Arms Decapping die. I am curious to see if they are licensing the patent from FW Arms, if Dillon has stepped in it, or they have found a way around the patent. The FW Arms decapping die is my favorite decapping die on the market. You don’t bend or break a decapping pin if you hit a Berdan primed case, and it positively clears primers past the crimp launching them down through the ram.

Springfield Armory KUNA

It’s not every day you see a new ground up design of a roller-delayed blow back action, however Springfield Armory recently released a new roller delayed carbine named the KUNA.  Technically this was released a few weeks prior to the release of the 2020 Heatseeker, a chassis version of their Model 2020 bolt action, so we are late to the punch but better late than never I suppose.

I think it is a handsome looking piece that is just begging to be an SBR, (Get rid of that silly pistol brace) and it comes ready to be a suppressor host. What’s not clear to me is whether Springfield Armory is doing any of the manufacturing, or if they are just importing it as the firearm was designed by HS Produkt in Croatia, being named after the Croatian word for the European pine marten, Croatia’s national animal. The XD line of firearms was a similar collaboration. The MSRP for the KUNA is not terrible at  $1150 for the version with the pistol brace.

That is all I have for this week. 

Jay