@@Jo_WardyYou're not wrong. Casing+bullet+primer+gunpowder=cartridge. But I'm sure you knew he meant that, you just wanted to be nit-picky. Even then, you said "shell". When it is clearly a brass casing.
Don’t try that at home people. Only experts can properly recycle ammunition like that, and all it takes is one small misplace, and boom, you’re missing fingers.
@@carterhaney8253 I've read that the brass can be reloaded around 5-7 times, or if there is any noticable damages, it should be retired immediately. But, how do you determine which time do you reload a brass. Obviously, to me, untrained one, all brass looked the same.
More pings, more reloads, more reloads, more pings, and more pings means more dopamine and that just increases reloads speed and makes the loop tighter
@@Aegis4521 don't project your insecurities on me because your simple knowledge of firearms is limited. maybe if you took time to study them more you'd get some more freedom around guns. dingus🙄
Yea cause most people who reload bring their reloading bench powders,dies, rounds primer’s and ingots to cast in case that first round decides it doesn’t want to be involved with JFK anymore
During my military service time in Korean Army, I had two rifles, M16A1 and M1 Garand. M1 Garand was for grenade launching. Inspite of heavy weight and recoil M1 Garand is an excellent rifle!
@@buhaytrysi6742as an American veteran and life long gun nut, I can tell you that each rifle is more than enough to get the job done for their own reasons. But if you ask me, I'll take my built up AR10 any day of the week over both.