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LT Brad McInnis
3
3
0
My personal belief is it doesn't matter what ammo you use. If you train on accuracy, you can hit the target as well with cheap ammo as expensive (home or self defense, not competitive shooting). If you keep your weapon clean, you lessen the chance of malfunction. If you train to clear jams and malfunctions, you will not be out of the fight.
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SFC Retired
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3 y
Cheap ammo means lower quality control. Sometimes they aren’t seated the same. Sometimes you have variances in charges. Sometimes you have grain differences in projectile weights. Sometimes you have poorly seated primers. All of these can lead to issues. Yes, you can have those issues with quality ammunition but it’s not as frequent. Ammunition is just like anything else, you get what you pay for. You still train for malfunctions but you should do so because it might happen on occasion. You should train for it because the crappy ammo almost guarantees it. I’ll plink with cheap ammo in my revolvers, lever actions, and bolt guns. I don’t shoot cheap crap through the semis. I also don’t hunt with cheap ammo or EDC cheap ammo.
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MAJ Audiology
2
2
0
Just buy a CZ 9 mm. The 75’s eat any ammo you give them.
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TSgt George Rodriguez
2
2
0
You buy what you can afford. Shot placement is what counts. I use a full size soft air gun to practice with. The gun cost me $15. and the pellets cost me $4.50 for a bottle of 2000 pellets so for less then $20 dollars I can practice when I want for as long as I want. A cheap way to keep your practice up and you can use it indoors or outside in your yard with no noise to disturb your nosy neighbors.
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SFC Retired
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3 y
Anything that improves and maintains the fundamentals is good.
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