Tula Ammo?

Alright so it finally clicked that I need to practice more, and the best accessories is Ammo & more range time.

I'm a basic bitch with 22LR, 9MM, 223. I'm debating whether to drop a hundreds into a bunch of Tula, or Maxx tech, Magtech, Winchester, Aguila, Armscor, etc.
They vary in price, and are mostly 115gr for 9mm and 55gr for 223.

I've had 124gr and 140gr 9mm.and hardly noticed any difference but a +P box I got was a big difference.

Just seeing what rounds to practice with for target shooting and home defense.

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Asking cuz my brother says Tula sucks, jams, and will corrode my guns but they function fine with it and I clean after every range visit

Tula is $9/50rnds and the next cheapest with brass case is $11/50 with like 5 brands. Then $12/50 with like 10 brands

Tula is the worst steel case. Steel case is fine assuming you lubricate the gun well but Wolf is a better option

.223 sucks. It will dirty your gun like no other.

Thanks guys. I found 250 rnd value packs with Brass cases. I might get some Tula as a cheap supplement

What you need is more dry fire practice. Think of dry fire practice as studying and your range time as the test to confirm the results of your studying. Also stay away from Tula. Wolf steel case 223 is about the same price and works great. Have about 2k rounds of Wolf steel alone through my LE6920 and have only had one minor malfunction after not cleaning or lubing it for 6+ months.

All the Russuan/ Eastern bloc steel case ammo is pretty similar. Tula is a manufacturer. Wolf is rebranded ammo from a variety of manufacturers, including Tula. It's a stretch to say that Wolf is better than Tula, because depending on the product they may be literally the exact same thing. There's at least as much variation between different products in the same brand as there is between brands.

Eastern European steel cased ammo is available in three or so basic styles: mil-spec (lacquer and sealant FMJ), polymer coated FMJ (usually no sealant), and soft point hunting rounds (can be poly or lacquer). There's no practical difference between the lacquer and polymer coated cases (the internet rumors are bullshit), but sealant will improve moisture resistance for long-term storage. The one important thing to understand is they all have bimetal jacketed bullets, which are much cheaper but cause increased barrel wear. For most guns, the cost difference more than offsets the cost of more frequent barrel replacement, but you might not want to shoot a lot of bimetallic bullets from something unique and expensive.

The cartridges themselves usually have excellent reliability, comparable to cheaper US-made ammo. Most guns designed outside the US were intended for use with steel cased ammo and will work flawlessly with it, but some US-designed weapons (especially AR-15s) have issues. The most common problems are light primer strikes (mil-spec steel cased often has harder primers than US-spec ammo) and ejection problems caused by the low taper on 5.56/.223 cases. Accuracy is usually so-so, again pretty comparable to cheaper US-made options. Like all ammo, some guns work better with some types than others. If yours works well with steel cased ammo, there's nothing wrong with shooting it.

Thanks I really appreciate it. I'm used to k just being a shit talking argument show even though we all enjoy the same hobby.

You don't need to practice, you just need to point in HD.
Just point with your finger and pull the trigger with your middle not index finger.
Point at that thing you want to shoot with your index finger and pull the trigger with your middle finger an you will hit the target within 50ft.
Never aim, just point in any HD situation.
You don't need range time for that.
Just good ammo that works every time.

Absolutely under no circumstances should anyone ever buy Maxxtech.

I shoot a lot of tulammo. I shoot some magtech and alot of wolf. But when I saw Maxxtech 1000 rounds of 9mm for $90 i had to buy it. I didnt even get through one box before it fucking squibed in my Jericho.

I took the ammo back to the gunshop that sold it to me and they refunded me and removed the bullet. Still really pissed me off by how shitty the ammo was

>1000 rounds of 9mm for $90 i had to buy it
>I didnt even get through one box before it fucking squibed in my Jericho
Congrats you jewed yourself senpai

Considering I got a full refund and my gun fixed free of charge, i called it breaking even. Also learned my lesson which was a positive

>Considering I got a full refund and my gun fixed free of charge
jew confirmed, well played kikeanon

>sell a product
>product doesnt work as intended
>return the product

Im sure you never have returned anything in your life.

wouldnt it be smarter in the future if you buy cheap ammo before you load it into your magazine, weigh each bullet to see if you have any powder in them or if they are of uneven weights, I mean you already have a scale for your drugs use it

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This is the stupidest post all day

AMMOSEEK.COM

Tula is not corrosive it's just very dirty

Get Wolf Gold, you can pick it up for $.27 a round, or less, and it's good quality brass. If you want to save another seven cents per round, then go for Wolf steel, it's good ammo, but it'll wear your barrel faster.

if you must get steel case get Barnaul or wolf online or golden tiger if you have gun in cal they make

For steel, Tula in pistols, Wolf in rifles seems to work best. Brass is pretty much good to go so long as it's not reman or reloaded.

>it'll wear your barrel faster.
We have this thread Every. Single. Day. No it doesn't.

Yes it does, the bimetal jackets are harder than pure copper jackets. On the plus side, it's cheap enough to buy you a new barrel in 8000 rounds anyway.

Pure copper jackets are not a thing. Gilding metal is used and the steel in bimetal is the same hardness as that.
The US used bimetal as far back as 1903 and multiple studies have showed no extra wear. Same is true with the Germans, Swiss, and Russians.

You can go on PSA right now and get 1000 brass cased 124 grain 9mm Nato spec rounds for like 180$ including shipping if you look at their daily deals or whatever page.
Tula isn't corrosive and cycles fine in most mid-price and above guns (glock, Beretta, m&p, exc) but cheap guns won't eat it. I've noticed magtech shoots very accurately out of my handguns compared to Tula but inside of 30 yards the difference is small if any. I only buy Tula when I can get it 145$ including shipping or less per 1000