Details
This highly regarded ammunition is competitively priced, made of quality remanufactured components and is new production, non-corrosive, in boxer primed, reloadable brass cases.
ARMSCOR Small Arms Ammunition line is one of the largest and most comprehensive in Southeast Asia. The Company offers a wide selection of competitively priced ammunition and components with sales spread throughout the world.
ARMSCOR, an ISO 9001 Certified Company, complies with the SAAMI, CIP and other military or customer desired standards or requirements.
ARMSCOR cartridges and components are widely used by the police, military, gun hobbyist, combat shooters and other shooting enthusiast due to its high quality, precise and dependable performance.
ARMSCOR Small Arms Ammunition line is one of the largest and most comprehensive in Southeast Asia. The Company offers a wide selection of competitively priced ammunition and components with sales spread throughout the world.
ARMSCOR, an ISO 9001 Certified Company, complies with the SAAMI, CIP and other military or customer desired standards or requirements.
ARMSCOR cartridges and components are widely used by the police, military, gun hobbyist, combat shooters and other shooting enthusiast due to its high quality, precise and dependable performance.
Additional Information
| Cost Per Round | 39.5¢ to 40.0¢ per round |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Armscor |
| Condition | new |
| Bullet Weight | 110 Grain |
| Bullet Type | Full Metal Jacket (FMJ) |
| Ammo Casing | Brass |
| Quantity | 1,000 |
| Ammo Caliber | 30 Carbine |
| Primer Type | Boxer |
Customer Reviews
- Just awful Review by Mike
-
I made the mistake of buying 1,000 rounds of this stuff. After 300 rounds, I have yet to get through a full magazine without failures to fire, or failures to cycle. The primers on some rounds are so hard that they won't go off after 3 or four hits.Performance Value Quality
I went to my gunsmith to see if a heavier hammer spring would help. After trying a couple of springs, he told me I'd be better off breaking the unfired rounds down for the brass. (Posted on 11/23/11)




