@@skurge8691Hmm, what part of their process did you not like? Just curious, I used to work for a place that pressed caps into casings and loaded them in the same place and the proccess was pretty smooth, granted it was a brand new factory from just a few years back,
@@bigvaxmeanie925there is demand for more; profit isn’t going to go down if you put more automation! First part on the assembly line is the most expensive!
@@litoaykiu limiting supply artificially inflates demand = higher prices to yield higher profits. The oil industry does this. It's why you will never see cheap gas ever again. Same goes for bullets. 9mm will never be 20 cents a round again
It's called quality control😉😉, or so he says, but we all know he's probably got a walk-in gun vault hidden behind one of his bookshelves ready for world War whatever
Every year when we do a walk through at Fiochii, us firemen always love seeing the barrels of finished rounds. 😂Pretty crazy to see all the work that goes in from start to finish.
CivilianTactical, ur videos are actually cool and entertaining, thank u for being in my feed everyday. PLEASE TEST HOW STRONG A WORLD WAR 2 HELMET IS!!!
50,000 square feet for brass casings, lead smelting pot with 20,000 gallon capacity, 200 Million yards of copper wire and advanced annealing furnaces for Jacket forming within 0.001/In. Bob in back making 1 primer per day...
Thank you so much for all your recycling you really truly care about being green because there's not huge forges having to make all that brass burning coal or a bunch of s*** smogging the environment and making recycling makes sense thank youguys that is awesome
I’ve been using HSL ammo since I first saw them at a gun show at the Cashman Center here in Las Vegas. That was about seven or eight years ago because there hasn’t been a gun show at the Cashman Center for a long time. I haven’t had any problems with their ammo, not even one failure! I work as an RSO and you wouldn’t believe how many of your customers were referred by me.
As someone who works in an ammo factory that creates it from scratch, I envy you not having to deal with broken bunters, broken flash hole pins, spun shells and shattered head turns, bad draws, untrimmed shells, trim scrap, bent mouths, bad plating scrap, bad washes, and machines that are 100 years old.
Wondering how polished the brass is. Imagine the happiness it gives to the person being hit with it and saying to his/her heaven mates, “The brass that hit me was a pure sunshine”. And so we made metals of kill more appealing.