M-1 Carbine Ammo
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
M-1 Carbine Ammo
Does anyone know of a good (cheap) place to buy M-1 Carbine Ammo, 30 Cal, 110 Grain ammo?
Looking to buy a case lot.
It would have to be shipped with in the USA.
Looking to buy a case lot.
It would have to be shipped with in the USA.
Happiness=Satisfaction over Desire
Gabby, you might want to try Natchez Shooter's Supply. It's where I buy most of my ammo when I'm looking for a case or two. They have always been prompt and reliable for me and usually their prices are as good as anyone. I'm afraid that these days however, the terms "cheap" and "ammo" are mutually exclusive. 

-
- Regular contributor
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Fri Aug 19, 2005 11:02 pm
- Location: South California
I find those two terms to be good partners when it comes to Russian ammo. Be prepared however to have the stink of varnish in your nose as you blast away. And I use them just for that- blasting with my AK-clone and my SKS. (Hey, my doctor said I need to exercise! So I exercise-- my trigger finger.)Blindpig wrote:Gabby, you might want to try Natchez Shooter's Supply. It's where I buy most of my ammo when I'm looking for a case or two. They have always been prompt and reliable for me and usually their prices are as good as anyone. I'm afraid that these days however, the terms "cheap" and "ammo" are mutually exclusive.
A bad shot is often caused by a loose nut behind the buttplate
No doubt that it's certainly acceptable to use in your AK47 and SKS. I just can't get comfortable with it in my S&W MP15.jaeger45 wrote:I find those two terms to be good partners when it comes to Russian ammo. Be prepared however to have the stink of varnish in your nose as you blast away. And I use them just for that- blasting with my AK-clone and my SKS. (Hey, my doctor said I need to exercise! So I exercise-- my trigger finger.)Blindpig wrote:Gabby, you might want to try Natchez Shooter's Supply. It's where I buy most of my ammo when I'm looking for a case or two. They have always been prompt and reliable for me and usually their prices are as good as anyone. I'm afraid that these days however, the terms "cheap" and "ammo" are mutually exclusive.
-
- Regular contributor
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Fri Aug 19, 2005 11:02 pm
- Location: South California
I know what you mean, BP: for the same reason that I feed only (good) factory loads and my handloads to my bull-barrelled Remington 700 in .223, thank you.Blindpig wrote:No doubt that it's certainly acceptable to use in your AK47 and SKS. I just can't get comfortable with it in my S&W MP15.jaeger45 wrote:I find those two terms to be good partners when it comes to Russian ammo. Be prepared however to have the stink of varnish in your nose as you blast away. And I use them just for that- blasting with my AK-clone and my SKS. (Hey, my doctor said I need to exercise! So I exercise-- my trigger finger.)Blindpig wrote:Gabby, you might want to try Natchez Shooter's Supply. It's where I buy most of my ammo when I'm looking for a case or two. They have always been prompt and reliable for me and usually their prices are as good as anyone. I'm afraid that these days however, the terms "cheap" and "ammo" are mutually exclusive.
A bad shot is often caused by a loose nut behind the buttplate
-
- Regular contributor
- Posts: 216
- Joined: Fri Aug 19, 2005 11:02 pm
- Location: South California
A tack driver, BP, thank you!Blindpig wrote:Man, I'll bet that's a sweet shooter!jaeger45 wrote:I know what you mean, BP: for the same reason that I feed only (good) factory loads and my handloads to my bull-barrelled Remington 700 in .223, thank you.
With my loads, at 100 yds, I get 1/2" MOA's. (A thought just came to mind: I really should try it with commercial ammo and see what I get, but I'm such a penny-pincher I haven't fired any of my years-old .223 factory loads, hehehe...)
A bad shot is often caused by a loose nut behind the buttplate