The fact is that the factory machines are much more precise than the human. Another major distinction in the cartridge is that calibers manufactured in the USSR were measured between the lands instead of the grooves. 380 ACP (9mm Browning) and the 9mm Luger which are. It is just a tough route, and people usually go factory or reload themselves, I never have bought reloaded ammo and a good amount of people wont even its from a trusted reloader. The 9x18mm Makarov cartridge is unusual in that it is. ![]() Joe, whatever you do, I wish you the best of luck. You don't want a phone call from a dude who says "Hey, loved your 9mm, shot great until one of them popped my barrel open and cracked my slide." Then you are in trouble. of Examples: Monday, today, last week, Mar 26, 3/26/04. Considering that you will go through thousands of reloaded rounds for sale, it will be hard to be good at this, not to mention your customers will not exercise the same caution as you do. In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your account. This could be with ONE overloaded casing or just ONE weakened casing, and this could happen as well with just once fired brass as well. Far from all that as well, reloading can be potentially hazardous and catastrophic because I have seen some people use purchased reloaded ammo and boom a case head pops off and the guns barrel shatters. It will be really hard to make a decent living or any money at that with all the insurance costs, time spent, and other efforts that need to be considered. I am not saying you shouldn't do it, but instead if you want to go down that route, you have a lot more things to consider and maybe 5 years from now, you can seriously consider it if you still feel the same way. Based on your posts, you seem pretty new to reloading and firearms in general. Without thinking about equipment costs (no, you cannot practically use your Rock Chucker or Lee hand press to reload in bulk), relationships with distributors and wholesalers, marketing, sales, finance, legal matters, a new enterprise will not be successful. Without liability, a mistake on your or your customer's part will ruin you. You need liability, you need a business license, you need to keep books, report income, basically be prepared to run it as you would any small business. It is not a hobby to make a few bucks on the side. It is not because I don't trust myself, but because going down that path requires a shift in your thinking. I have been loading for years, yet I would never ever expose my reloads for sale, legal issues aside. ![]() To load for other people takes even more experience. Here's my 2c (which you may not like to hear )Įxperience with reloading takes time and you have to load thousands of rounds in various calibers before you get to the point that you can load well for yourself. ![]() OP, I know you asked this question in another place as well. do I need some kind of insurance to make it too? does anyone know the price of it? or do i have to have it? I just read some info online on a 06 license and yes I DO NEED IT just like you guys said, its only $30 for 3 years so not bad at all.
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