This means you can also "lay in a supply" which helps insulate against the sudden price hikes of the last few years.
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I thought that was just shotgun pellets? Is it rifled ammo as well?The biggest downside to an underlever for me is the mandatory shooting of roundnose bullets.
And with "lead-free" becomming mandatory in a lot of places, options are limited.
The newer Hornady's use a spire nose in their LeveRevolution
http://www.hornady.com/store/leverevolution
The tip is designed not to be hard enough to set off the primer in front
Its just another case of the hysterical busybodies jumping on any bandwagon they can Mrcharly. Ask them for evidence of a single animal poisoned by lead ammunition and they get all huffy!
The point about the animal poisoning was in reference to mrcharlys point about rifled ammo gentlemen - we already use steel or bismuth for wildfowl
In Germany (where the lead-free rifle ammo story started, and I do most of my hunting) there were some cases of eagles killed bij leadpoisoning from eating guts from deer and boar left in the fields after gutting.
.
There is a guy in the USA who tests shooting all sorts of guns and ammo - in his pictures, lead splash from impacts on wood are very visible. So I can readily believe that any bullet that is lead or has an exposed lead tip will splash lead when impacting bone.And in the end, I don't like really small paricles of lead in my food. When you look at an X-ray of a shot animal you can clearly see its full of minute lead particles.
*cut*
So if you are using full-copper bullets, I guess you can't count on expansion anymore.
Do you have a link to the story please?