I'm trying to obtain 180 grn soft points heads for reloading.
Does anyone anywhere in the UK know a source.
I've tried a few places but nobody seems to stock them.
Thanks in anticipation.
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I'm trying to obtain 180 grn soft points heads for reloading.
Does anyone anywhere in the UK know a source.
I've tried a few places but nobody seems to stock them.
Thanks in anticipation.
Try Midway UK they list some
Remington Core-Lokt Bullets 303 Caliber, 7.7mm Japanese (311 Diameter) 180 Grain Round Nose Soft Point Box of 100 (Bulk Packaged) - 22813 (100) - Midway UK
You could also try Bob Smart email
smart.co@btinternet.com
He has helped me in the past with biits.
If you are wondering.....
Bob Smart (Smart.Co) is a dealer in the Manchester area.
If I remember corectly he has a lot of clients who are long range shooters and many have 303s.
I have bought alot of Partizan from him in the past.
ok, many thanks.
Why is it people here in the UK insist on using the term "heads" when the correct term is bullet or projectile?
The head of a cartridge is that part which surrounds the primer, hence the word "Headstamp".
This is not at all personal jr57. I think the term originated from ignorant dealers selling deactivated weapons and ammunition in the UK.
If you want to be really pedantic, the head of a bullet (not the cartridge) is the ogival part above the parallel portion when the ogive is described in terms of "calibre radius head" or c.r.h.
End of rant!
Regards
TonyE
I use heads just because it is what I am use to using when talking in english.
I usualy use ogive as I live in France and it is what we use here or we use ball.
I believe the origin of the "bullet head" abomination stems from the popular misuse of "bullet" for "cartridge" among the great masses of ballistically-ignorant people in the English-speaking population. Since these folks believe that "bullet" means the entire cartridge, when a few of them are exposed to enough knowledge to realize that the projectile is a separate entity, they search for a differentiating term and have invented "bullet head" - or maybe they just like to drive traditionalists crazy!:madsmile:
I like to give those for whom English is an additional language a lot of tolerance - since most of them do far better in my native language than I could in theirs. N'est-ce pas? :cheers:
This one, like many other small things in our world of firearms and related subjects...is one I've long since given up on trying to change. People speak the way they speak, and we can't change them. They simply don't care to listen.
Using "gun" to describe a rifle,pistol,revolver,carbine is the one that really gets me....
I try to use more passive terms now with civilians, mostly because of their gut fear of the power they project...firearm instead of "Guns" or certainly "Weapons"...at any rate, I found the masses neither know correct terms nor do they care to learn. If they do...they already know.
Yes, firearm is my go to with civilians also, "weapon" is reserved for like minded company.
I would say "round" is also appropriate when referring to a cartridge.