6.5x55 Swedish M14 Blank, Wooden Projectile, 4800rds. 5-2159c $239.52 $96.00 Enter Quantity Desired: Availability: (In Stock) Product Overview

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Reviews 6.5x55 Swede M14 blank ammo. Berdan primed with tarnished brass cases featuring mixed headstamps, wooden bullet. 4800rd bulk shipment. We recommend treating this ammo as corrosive. All standard firearm safety rules must be observed when firing these blanks. ATTENTION: All ammunition requires an adult signature over 21 upon delivery, no exceptions.

Cannot ship ammo to Alaska, Hawaii, or US Territories. The following locations have ammunition restrictions.

If you are in Illinois a FOID card must on file before we will ship.

If you are in California we will only ship to a C&R holder with COE, an FFL dealer, or to a licensed Ammo Vendor.

If you are in Los Angeles City, Chicago, Cook County IL, New York State, or Massachusetts we will only ship to an FFL dealer.

If you are in Connecticut a State permit, certificate, or FFL is required. WARNING: This product can expose you to lead which is known to the State of California to cause Cancer and Reproductive Harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov. c/m c/m MANUFACTURER:



Weight: 201.60



Condition: New

CUSTOMER REVIEWS: Would you like to review this product? Owners are invited to do just that. Place an order for this product and we'll send you an invitation to review in 14 days. Total Reviews: 21 by STEPHEN B. Date Added: Wednesday April 01, 2020 I load these for use in my Ljungman AG-42B. This rifle came from the arsenal rebuild with the gas port full open and the adjustment screw staked in place



Using factory ammo, I get ejector mark and rim damage from the extractor. The primers are NOT flattened.



So I make reduced power loads that function, and not damage the brass.



This ammo is of decent quality, but be aware that they are packed in the orange boxes shown in the product description, and these boxes are not made of acid free materials.



In a box of 20, my experience has been:

2-3 corroded/pitted and need to be thrown away

2-4 with light pitting/tarnish that can be polished off using a brass wire brush after tumbling

The remaining is good stuff, perhaps with dark spots that can be reloaded.



Brass is mixed head stamps and years, so I suspect range brass that was reloaded for target purposes.



Have fired around 400 reloads now. No duds, no hang fires, only two split necks from the reloading process.



Overall, for my uses, in the Rifle I use it specifically for, it works as I need it to.



Rating: [ 4 of 5 stars!] by James R. Date Added: Saturday January 25, 2020 I have reloaded ~2000 of these blanks so far, with:

1 bad primer

1 case that split down the side during firing

~15 case necks that split during the reloading process or during firing.

That is fewer that 20 bad rounds out of 2000, with only one dud primer. I did not discard ANY of the cases for corrosion; they all seem decent enough for one time use, so this is a worst case test.

Accuracy was fine; when I dialed in the powder weight and COAL, I was getting 1 MOA accuracy.



Rating: [ 5 of 5 stars!] by Larry J S. Date Added: Sunday September 29, 2019 I opened one of the three crates and opened two of the plastic battle packs. I’ve opened around 30 boxes. All the same. Lots of corrosion and oxidation on brass. They will mostly clean up using an aggressive vibrating media. I had to use a ceramic media and brass polish. Maybe 5% in my opinion are unsafe to use. However, most will eventually clean up fine. The brass is basically all milsup brass from nearly a hundred year span reloaded as blanks. Not junk subpar brass just made for blanks. I have found 10 different headstamps so far. From 1927 into the early 80’s. Even a few Norma and Lapua headstamps. Still all Berdan primed. I pulled the Bullets and dumped the powder. Annealed the necks, used my neck sizing die on them and loaded them up. No issues at all. Good neck tension and no splitting. Even with 133 shipping, I still consider it a good deal if you don’t mind doing a little work.



Rating: [ 4 of 5 stars!] by James R. Date Added: Monday June 24, 2019 Great Ammo for the $!



Rating: [ 5 of 5 stars!] by William C. Date Added: Saturday April 27, 2019 Pulled 200 wooden projectiles, dumped powder and reloaded with Varget and 140gr Speer Hot Cores. First 50 fired without issue.



Rating: [ 5 of 5 stars!]