October 9, 2005, 11:51 AM | #26 |
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It's funny because I see and talk to some guys that use it at the range because it is cheap. They complain constantly because it stinks, is dirty as hell, and not consistently accurate. They are miserable during the whole range experience and then after they say how great Wolf is for the money, it's a riot.
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October 9, 2005, 01:19 PM | #27 |
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I see no problem using Wolf in a military surplus SKS, AK, or Makarov pistol. However, I would not use it in any new gun that I really cared about. The steel cases are rough on the extractor. Also, I have heard that if the gun gets too hot, like from many rapidly fired shots, the lacquer on the case can melt a little and make a big mess that's hard to clean up in your gun.
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October 9, 2005, 02:51 PM | #28 |
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I can’t think of why anyone would want to put Wolf in something like a Remington 700. Its well known Wolf is not terribly accurate or match ammo so you’d be stupid to put it in something like a scoped Rem. 700 where the capabilities of the ammo would limit you far more than the capabilities of the firearm. However, for something like offhand plinking at pumpkins with an AR, AK, FAL, G3, or most pistols or pistol caliber caliber carbines, its fine IMHO. YMMV.
Now about the steel – those of you claiming the steel of the Wolf cases will damage chamber and extractors, can you elaborate on the type of steel alloy from which Wolf cases are made in contrast to that of what your extractor is made? Also please feel free to comment on which design features comblock guns possess which makes them "designed for steel cases" which US weapons lack. I’m not a metallurgist, but even I know all steel is not created equal, and all steels do not have the same physical properties. It was claimed here that the steel cases do not snap back as easily as a brass case would. Have you ever seen a steel spring – a coiled or a flat spring? Do you honestly believe Wolf cases are made with the same hardened and high quality tool steel extractors and most quality gun parts are made from? Heck, the only ammo I use in my M11 SMG is Wolf. Its still using the same extractor that came in the gun when it was originally made 20 years ago and after tens of thousands of rounds its still running on Wolf without a problem. OTOH, I've had extractors break after just a few hundred rounds of brass cased .22LR in an AM180 - does that mean brass cases are hard on extractors, or does it mean I just got a bum extractor? |
October 9, 2005, 03:04 PM | #29 |
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Damage to your extractor is NOT caused by the hardness of the steel case.
It is caused by the increased force needed to extract the case. WildAlaska: We had a guy weld shut an old a older Ruger No.1 in .223 with a single round of Wolf. It took a deadblow hammer to get the action open. |
October 9, 2005, 03:22 PM | #30 | |
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Note the placement of my left hand on the mag well. After 4-5mags dumped in quick succession in full-auto on a 90+ degree summer day the aluminum handguard was too hot to hold. Gun ran fine, and no malfs or other evidence of 'melted lacquer'. |
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October 9, 2005, 04:42 PM | #31 | |
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I also took a look at the bolt and chamber as best I could without a scope or magnifying glass. Everything looked good. I didn't see any abnormal wear or accumulation, just the normal soot that any semiauto would develop (and surprisingly little for 400 rounds). I built this gun for three reasons: First, I wanted an EBR with all the scary features (collapsible stock, flashider, and hicap mags). Second, I wanted to see what the AR hype was about. Third, I wanted to see if the AR was as unreliable as some folks say. To puruse the final reason, I've decided to not clean the gun until it hits 1000 rounds or starts jamming, whatever comes first. At first, I wasn't going to use Wolf because of what I've read on the Internet (which isn't real, remember). However, affordable brass cased ammo is getting harder to find around here. It gets expensive to feed this rifle when you can blast through 6mags worth in a single session. I tried Wolf and found it acceptable for my purposes. While I had the gun apart, I did wipe some of the soot from the bolt in order to inspect it, but I did no deep cleaning or scrubbing. The sort of wipedown I gave it could be accomplished in the field by a soldier using his shirttail or a rag. To compare the use of Wolf in an AR to Wolf in a boltrifle is like comparing apples and oranges. At least for me, the two rifles have completely different uses. My bolt rifle gets fired 20-30 times during a range session and all of the brass is collected for handloading (I load maybe 200 rounds a year). My handloads are crafted for accuracy and terminal effect on deer. My AR is a range blaster, no more, no less. I go through as much as 180 rounds in a session. I don't load for it and don't plan to either. The ammo costs add up for the AR. I have no particular attachment to Wolf Ammo. If Wal-Mart still carried the WWB 223 (7.76 for 40 rounds), I'd never would have touched Wolf. Good grief, this post got long... Chris |
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October 9, 2005, 05:24 PM | #32 |
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Shaggy WildAlaska: I just did a little x-spearmint.
I took a just fired Wolf 7.62x39 case and heated it with open flame for 2 minutes. I then took my pocket knife and tried to scrape away the coating. The result? You can scratch the coating away but it dosent appear to soften. I then took another case and scraped ALL of its coating off onto a piece of wax paper. I then transfered the scrapings to a butter knife which I then heated with an open flame for 3 minutes. After 3 minutes the scrapings were still solid. |
October 9, 2005, 05:37 PM | #33 |
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"If true, then its seems it would still only damage the extractor if the case was harder than the extractor"
Shaggy: Think of it this way. Say it requires 20ft/lbs of force to extract a 5.56 our of your carbine using brass case ammo. Now say it takes 30ft/lbs of force to extract steel case ammo. Your extractor is only built to take 20ft/lbs so every time your weapon cycles you over-stress that part. The Youngs Modulus of the case rim isnt an issue as all it has to do is hold the extractor and not get ripped off. |
October 9, 2005, 05:42 PM | #34 | |
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October 9, 2005, 06:10 PM | #35 |
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Here's a random thought...
Is the Wolf related failure rate really higher than other ammo? We pay attention to failures that might be associated with it (just like some folks key in on 1911 failures, etc). However, if a similar failure occurs with brass cased ammo, does it get noticed as an ammo related failure or some failure with the gun or it's maintenance? I've heard of some of the same failures occuring with brass ammo, but people don't seem to blame the ammo itself in those situations. Put another way... If two identical guns, in identical (or nearly so) condition were used as a test, one given a diet (maybe 1k rounds?) of Wolf and the other a diet of Winchester White Box 223, which would have more problems? Of course, both would receive the same level of cleaning and maintenance during the test, etc. Is the supposedly higher failure rate of Wolf due to lower quality or because people that shoot Wolf tend to shoot more, therefore firing more rounds between needed cleanings? Are failures with brass cased ammo recognized more as gun related failures rather than ammo related? I'd put my rifle to the test if someone would supply the ammo. Otherwise, I doubt I'd burn through that much ammo in a year. Chris |
October 9, 2005, 06:34 PM | #36 |
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My Mosin-Nagant loves Wolf 7.62x54r
My Chi-Com SKS loves Wolf 7.62x39 My EAA Saiga AK loves wolf 7.62x39 My BSA Martini International loves Wolf .22lr (as does all of my rimfire rifles) My Colt Commander hates it. My Ruger Mini-14 hates it.
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October 9, 2005, 07:18 PM | #37 |
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I shot 100 rounds today... it was not nearly as dirty as winchester white box, or UMC. (I heard it's been changed and doesn't shoot as dirty as it used to, and they got rid of the coating???? is this true anyone?). But I did have some problems with feeding in my taurus 27/4 in 40S&W. The price was right at gander mountain, so I had to try wolf in my .40, but I'm not quite happy. I'll keep shooting it in my SKS though with a HUGE smile on my face!!!
tom |
October 9, 2005, 07:44 PM | #38 | ||||||
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Thus the reason for Saftey glasses and hearing protection.. Quote:
Wolf: $139-1000 rounds. 223 LAKE CITY SS109 GREEN TIP 223 (PD Ammo, possibly out of spec) $229-1000 Rounds. so for every 1000 rounds u save $90 bucks...thats 3 or 4 AR-15 extractors easy, in a Rem 700, thats one every thousand rounds(you dont charge $100 bux to replace one do ya??..if ya do, its highway robbery). so there is real savings to be had here, especially for the guy that has 2 or 3 kids at home, and not alot of disposable income... Quote:
Define Sucks....quality is subjective in this type of thing...some guys are happy if it goes bang everytime, and if they have to do some maint., no big deal..benchresters would laugh at the thought of using Wolf. all in a days labor...lol. |
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October 9, 2005, 08:06 PM | #39 |
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TomG has something of a point too.
I don't find wolf to be particularly dirty. Winchester White box typically leaves quite large powder grains and residue all over my Glock. Wolf not so dirty, and no large unburnt grains. So there is some American ammo you can run that is quite a ways dirtier than Wolf. That is only my experience. In my SKS the Wolf doesn't leave it too dirty either. I run Wolf pretty much exclusively so I can't compare, however I can say that after a few hundred rounds, it isn't in need of a cleaning, no junk buildup anywhere. Save for some red crap from its primer sealant or whatever. But I never really did clean it all that good anyway, it's an SKS. Wolf from what I hear used to be much worse than it is now. They are cleaning up their act so to speak. If you aren't using an AR-15... Shoot it, try it... See how accurate it gets for you, see how dirty it makes your gun, choose your own destiny.
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October 9, 2005, 11:00 PM | #40 | ||
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Im sure if I searched around I could find ya a better deal...heck Im here in Alaska with all the extra shipping that entials and I am doing 223 for as little as $175 per thousand, brass case reloadable...but whatever.... WildthisisgettinsillyalreadyAlaska |
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October 9, 2005, 11:31 PM | #41 |
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I could use some hot .25 handloads for my Raven.
I've been converted. I'm going to start carrying it. Who's got 'em? |
October 9, 2005, 11:41 PM | #42 |
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Some will and some wont
My glocks in 40 and 45 will eat the stuff all day.My sons colt jams after a box or so.DIRTY!!!
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October 10, 2005, 12:33 AM | #43 |
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Just my .02 cents, but the only blown-up guns I have ever seen that were not because of crapy home brewed reloads, involved WOLF ammo!
Number 1 was a Bushy Dissapator that was being fiered with Wolf. Didn't destroy the rifle but when it was all said and done it needed a new bolt assembly. Number 2 was a H&K USP in .45ACP. Blew out the magazine and broke the frame on the left side pretty good, as well as giving the shooter a pretty good gash on his mit. The customer paid H&K to replace the frame/firearm, and Wolf paid the customer the price of a new USP. Number 3 was a Glock 21 also in .45ACP that one also blew the magazine out of the gun and blew the extractor clean off of the gun. The shooter was fine. Sent it to Smyrna and the boys there replaced the mag catch, extractor and gave him a new mag. As well as send him a letter telling him to not shoot WOLF again or they would not fix it again. Personaly having seen this, I refuse to shoot this ammo, with the exeption of the 7.62x39mm stuff. If you are brave enough or haven't had any problems with it, well shoot-on brotha.
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