Which brings us to the real question, Just how many active ML shooters are there and how much do they shoot? My local gun shop carries very little ML stuff. And that shop has been there longer than I have with a good clientele. I'd say they keep enough ML supplies to support the casual hobbyist. How many more stores are like this?Sounds good, but in reality how many people is "everyone" ? Traditional muzzleloader shooters and hunter are small group and getting smaller by the day. If they never sold another cap it wouldn't affect their bottom line one bit. That's the the sad reality of it.
In my area, there is one nearby store that carries Schutzen BP. They do not currently have 4Fg, and their supply is spotty. No other brands are available locally to me. I haven't seen any high power primers at any local gun shops for the last several years. The only available primers have been at gun shows from the large ammo sellers. I just recently got a box of 1000 CCI small rifle magnum primers for $85 and they were packaged in white box for commercial reloaders. So, supplies are still short, but not as bad as in past years. No caps anywhere to be found. We need good tooling to make our own cups. I hope our friend who posted in the other thread comes through with his tooling design. Homemade non-corrosive primer comp is a viable option with the lead nitrate-hypophosphite formulations.Don’t buy their response. I’m on several stock alert notices for #10 &11 caps, large pistol and rifle primers. So far small pistol and rifle primers are becoming available but not the large rifle primers. Large pistol primers has popped up now and then but nothing about caps. Powders are becoming available too but the prices on ALL components have doubled or tripled in pricing. Then you have the shops selling caps for $28 a tin while Academy had the caps for $9.99 a tin, common plain greed by some shops. Midway charges a hazmat fee on powders and primers plus an additional handling fee for black powder. I for one refuse to pay these unfair prices and while other bend and pay up the abuse will continue.
sorry but until you work in the plant ......... you just don't know what your commenting onI don’t necessarily buy that either. Primers and caps are different animals.
For those that will not spend the time to look up Ethan’s video on this, he spoke with representatives of the company. They contend that they have to change over the machines to produce caps. It is a costly ordeal and they only change over and run caps for a very limited time once per year.
Primers and caps are not the same nor are they produced the same.
You all can fight over caps all you want. There is an alternative and I don’t mean flintlocks.
I’ve seen too many reports of people buying caps at stores that don’t gouge, then turning them around to resell at a gouging price, so if I see them cheap, I buy ‘em all before someone can do that.What you contend is true. But both times I bought caps off the shelves last year, I left at leas a couple packs for others. I guess my guilt got the best of me and personally, I still feel that’s the proper thing to do.
also remember the retailer has a finite amount of sales space and they base what they stock on turnover the more turns the more profitplane and simpleI remember a lot of people bragging a year ago about how they had managed to order a case quantity of caps. It helped with their shipping costs but had the same effect as people buying carts full of toilet paper during the pandemic.
Every one person buying a case of tins took a dozen tins off the market. I won’t argue about their current production but many of us are now in the mode of get them while you can, myself included. I didn’t need more musket caps when I visited DGW in Union City yet I bought them when they had no #10 caps at all and that triggered my “grab some extras” response. I think we have changed our buying habits when we can no longer count on picking up a tin of 100 at the gun shop. It is reflexive for me, to be sure I don’t run out.
as I have stated here before caps are only produced if and when there is a break in the need/orders chain for primers. as a retiree from a part of the Vista Outdoors group ( parent company of CCI and Remington Ammunition ) I know this is a fact! The cure for this is to order/buy more when they are available if there is a case (10 tins) on the shelf/hook buy em all, if there is 2 3 4 cases on the shelf buy em all. retailers stock their shelves with what has the fastest turnover, if it takes a year to sell 10 tins then they aren't going to order enough often enough to create a demand for greater production! this is the same for everything doesn't matter what it is. Don't believe me ask Kibler if he would produce a single kit if he wasn't in a constant state of back order !
Which brings us to the real question, Just how many active ML shooters are there and how much do they shoot?
Just looked at the website and they only have musket caps and kind of high priced seems to meBaloney. Look up ammoseek.com. Prices have come down, too. Caps? Plenty of RWS and Schuetzen available as posted on this forum numerous times. But, they're non-corrosive if that's a concern. Good grief you guys.
Hadn't thought of that. I know .410 shotguns are slow movers because .410 ammo is really expensive! Those modern revolvers shooting it took up a lot of demand.No "factory made" caps will spell the eventual demise of Pietta, Uberti. etc. I doubt that there are many first time buyers who will have the where-with-al to make their own caps. That goes for casual cap and ball users also. Just a thought.
That is true, however, this ole boy will still leave a few for others as long as I have what I need. And real soon, if things go as planned, I couldn’t care less about store bought caps. I’ll be making my own so you all can fight and argue all you want over this conundrum.I’ve seen too many reports of people buying caps at stores that don’t gouge, then turning them around to resell at a gouging price, so if I see them cheap, I buy ‘em all before someone can do that.
I found several tins at a Walmart a couple times at their regular price of $5.62, and right after muzzleloader hunting season unexpectedly found a bunch more on clearance for $3.00 per tin. Snatched ‘em all. I’ve been regularly using those as donations to our club meeting auctions and as freebies to other club members. They’ve been understandably popular items.
Cant find any either.I emailed CCI yesterday asking if caps are being produced and why caps cannot be found anywhere. I don't buy the response but the following is the reply from CCI technical services.
"We are currently producing and shipping millions of primers and caps a day. With the current market we are in it is very difficult for distributors and dealers to keep them on the shelves. Our products are sent directly from the plant to distributors. Where it is then sold to retailers and then to you. We have no way of tracking who has it or when they will receive it in stock."
Millions a day kind of cracks me up, just don't see it.
flint mines will be taken over by the government. its true.........They will make a run at flints next.
flint mines will be taken over by the government. its true.........
Hodgson had another price increase in January. Avg hike was 20%.Any time I find something I got from waybackwhen that still has the pricetag on it, I don't know whether to chuckle or cuss. I was in a store yesterday to get a pound of modern powder, what I paid 45 bucks for a year ago is now 65. Hope the cost increases meant the folks working there to actually make it got a raise, but me thinks probably not. I'll just suck it up I guess, cause a damn sure ain't gonna take up golf as a hobby instead of shooting
Enter your email address to join: