Good range brass

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  • Major Tom
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 6181

    #1

    Good range brass

    I have picked range brass for years. Some I keep for my guns, others I throw in a bucket and sell to the scrap yard. Like anything else you pick up you have to closely examine it for defects. Works good for me as I save money and make money too.
  • joem
    Senior Member, Deceased
    • Aug 2009
    • 11835

    #2
    I pick up some brass at the club. Some of the brass I picked up looked good visually but was crap when fired.

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    • psteinmayer
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2011
      • 1527

      #3
      I've received brass at ranges from shooters who didn't save. If I see them shooting .38, 357, .44, or .45 ACP, I always ask if they save... and if they don't, I ask if I can have their brass. In that case, it's usually new, and I sort out what I don't want to reload when I get home. Some guys are really great about it, but occasionally, I run into a jerk who get's all nasty, and at that point, I walk away.
      "I was home... What happened? What the Hell Happened?" - MM1 Jacob Holman, USS San Pablo

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      • Major Tom
        Very Senior Member - OFC
        • Aug 2009
        • 6181

        #4
        Especially after a LEO shoot, I pick up their brass. It's all once fired and nice and shiney.

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        • joem
          Senior Member, Deceased
          • Aug 2009
          • 11835

          #5
          I shoot a bit of 9mm mak and try to pick up my brass. I don't look very close until I get home and find I picked up mostly .380 brass. Where does my Mak brass go? I seem to find only about 20%, the rest is nowhere to be found. There is chat around the covered shooting pavilion and I pick clean shinney brass. Where does it go?

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          • barretcreek
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2013
            • 6065

            #6
            We host hunters for a sight in days; makes enough money to pay the taxes on the club. I pick up the brass I know is new, it's worth the effort. Also the LEO brass if they leave it. The Feds are getting paranoid theirs will end up 'salting' a crime scene believe it or not.

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            • PhillipM
              Very Senior Member - OFC
              • Aug 2009
              • 5937

              #7
              My club has a rule that a shooter can leave brass laying on the ground. A bunch of retirees usually scavenge the range about daybreak, and I don't have a problem with that, good for them.

              One day I watched a gentleman pick up all his once fired 223 and then walk past me to throw it in the trash! I educated him to just leave it on the ground and took home 115 pieces of nice clean brass.
              Phillip McGregor (OFC)
              "I am neither a fire arms nor a ballistics expert, but I was a combat infantry officer in the Great War, and I absolutely know that the bullet from an infantry rifle has to be able to shoot through things." General Douglas MacArthur

              Comment

              • Major Tom
                Very Senior Member - OFC
                • Aug 2009
                • 6181

                #8
                At my range there is a 55 gal. drum just for brass. What a gold mine, er brass mine. A 5 gal. bucket will generally get me $50 at the scrap yard.

                Comment

                • Dollar Bill
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2009
                  • 156

                  #9
                  At my range, if it makes it to the brass bucket, it belongs to the range. If I see someone shooting 45, 308 or 30-06. I'll ask if I can have it. A handloader will say "no" up front so it's typically brand new (once fired) brass.

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