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Southern Ohio Gun 7.62x25 Ammo Sale
Southern Ohio Gun is running a sale on 7,62x25 ammo.
$219 for an 800 round can, - 85 Grain - Full Metal Jacket - Brass Case - Lead Core - Berdan Primed Assumed corrosive. http://www.southernohiogun.com/milit...5-caliber.html
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There are no dangerous weapons; there are only dangerous men. To speak without thinking is to shoot without aiming. Last edited by AFJuvat; 01-17-2017 at 10:40 AM. |
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Caleb (01-17-2017) |
#2
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I don't have a Tok so, no need for said round. But, that's a good price!
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**I have been Enlightened** |
#3
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Link didn't work but I have access to thousands of surplus rounds and have reloading supplies to crank out a thousand high quality rounds so I don't need any. However every time I see an ad for 1950's through 1980's Surplus 7.62x25, 7.62x39, and 7.62x54R Russian, Yugoslav and Chinese ammo, I always give a little chuckle. They produced that stuff in preparation for a BIG war with us. They were so terrified of us, that they made so much ammo that their military couldn't shoot it all. So much was produced in that era that metric tons of it is sold on the surplus market to the very country they meant to shoot it at. It was always destined to be here in one form or another!
How different is the ammo procurement for the US that we don't have crates of Cold Era .223 and .308? I guess we do see .45ACP and 30-06 but that is mostly WWII production, right?
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CBOB0746 NRA Life Member Florida CWL Since 1992 |
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Link fixed.
Sorry 'bout that.
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There are no dangerous weapons; there are only dangerous men. To speak without thinking is to shoot without aiming. |
#5
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Quote:
As a result, they have a very different view on surplus... Obsolete equipment was set aside for category C or D units. Categories A and B are main line and reserve units, C and D are essentially civilian groups as a last ditch defense - the stereotypical "Old men and Kids" units. During my last trip to Russia in the early 2000s, they still had warehouses full of T-34 tanks - just in case they needed them again. We tend to be quicker to sell stuff off as surplus, but we generally use a "first in-first out" process where the oldest stuff gets used first. Plus we fire hundreds of thousands of rounds each year for training purposes. which consumes a lot of the old stuff. That said, from time to time, they find a warehouse WWII - Vietnam era spam cans full of ammunition. 30-06 ammo was produced up to the late 60s - early 1970s. 45 ACP was produced until the late 80s - early 90s. The 1911 had been retired in 1986 - 1987, but there were still quite a few M3 submachine guns in service in the armored divisions.
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There are no dangerous weapons; there are only dangerous men. To speak without thinking is to shoot without aiming. |
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Yeah I can see how close they were to speaking German, would make them not want to make the same mistake again. I also tend to think of WWII as being far back in history and the 1950's were just a few years after WWII ended. My mind also tends to think that the Soviets and the US relations were closer because of WWII than they actually were. Seemed like we went from being Allies to Cold War overnight but I guess we weren't Allies that were that close. Just Allies that had a common enemy.
Still, there is a lot of Com Bloc Surplus on this side of the pond!
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CBOB0746 NRA Life Member Florida CWL Since 1992 |