by Wapiti » 23 May 2026, 8:20 am
Well from reading all the posts it's been very eye opening.
Sounds like the experienced reloaders who've sampled many of the supposedly acceptable brands have had just as many issues, or more, with the so-called accepted brands of brass. Experienced loaders here say some of the big US brands have some awful batches, if not brass that's considered only bin-worthy, as many find with Winchester.
Off-centre flash holes or pockets that are loose, then tight, uneven neck thicknesses etc are normal with US brass.
I'm certainly not a brand snob, I've got boxes of unused brass of the big European brands which is the most expensive per piece than anything anywhere else, and I'm not scared to try stuff that keyboard jockeys on a certain big Aus forum call crap, like PPU.
Unfortunately I've even had Nosler brand, which was advertised in the past as US premium, sorted, deburred reamed blah blah to have as much variation as loose bags of 308W PPU that is still $33/100 at an online shop I buy from, and a few months ago, was under $30/50.
When 99% of your shooting is in the bush and you lose cases because it's something that has to be accepted, that's so appreciated.
IN fact, when weighing PPU brass, expecting to sort it into lots for consistency, I have found them to be as consistent as the premium brands and I'm wasting my time.
PPU doesn't pretend to call itself a premium offering as others do, rather budget instead, so people seem to forget that the fact this stuff is so uniform and lasts so long is in fact amazing. And for this economical brand to rival stuff 5x the price is just bloody amazing.
How about comparing apples with apples, and then realise how good this stuff stacks up.
As another example, there's a fellow cattle bloke up the road who quietly enjoys his certain quirky rifles with difficult-to-get ammunition, and if it wasn't for PPU he would not be shooting his favourites, or have reloading components for them. Let alone how much these quirky cartridges love that factory ammo.
He relies on PPU factory and brass for 7.5 Swiss, 6.5x52, 6.5x55 and 7.62x54R. Even his 222Rem, he can get cases mailed in 3 days to his letterbox from Cleavers.
It would be a shame for some reading this thread with cartridges out of the mainstream like above to discount PPU, in fact in his case it'd his only regular option.
On factory ammo, those with experience know that what shoots really consistently in one firearm can, very likely, spray in another.
True also is some big US brands sold now are all over the place pressure wise, not just marginal in reusability of the cartridge cases.
In my own experiences, it's been a couple of big US brands that have almost blown-up rifles I own. A troll through previous posts of mine will show proven examples of that. In the past I've always posted up the evidence in pics, because I don't want others to have something awful happen to them as well, and to show it's really happened.
Beware of ever listening to the person who says there is a problem with a certain brand just because they don't have the experience to realise the variations in likes and dislikes of the firearms we use is the issue instead of the quirks of that rifle, or the quirks of dimensional variation between European brands and the changes the US makers decided to just enforce to streamline their manufacturing.
Centrefires are just the same as rimfires in that respect, some rifles hate what others gobble up.
What's sad is the world is full of brand snobs, grinding their axes too thin, deliberately infecting others. Myth busted.
"The only way to avoid criticism is to do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing."
Aristotle.
Regards G,
AKA Dr. Doolittle