Is CCI Blazer 10mm ammo good?
10mm AUTO ammo by CCI are an excellent choice for target practice or just plinking around at the range. CCI Blazer Brass 10mm AUTO is a new production, non-corrosive, re-loadable ammunition with boxer primers and brass casing. 10mm AUTO ammo by CCI is packaged in boxes of 50 cases of 1000.
Is CCI Blazer any good?
Over the past few decades, CCI Blazer loads have earned an excellent reputation for reliability. This is a credible training load with much to recommend. I obtained a supply of CCI Blazer 115-grain 9mm for test purposes.
What is CCI Blazer?
CCI® Blazer Rimfire Ammo is ideal for target practice and firearms training, loaded with 40-grain, lead round-nose bullets, fired at over 1,200 fps. Blazer Rimfire Ammo is great for plinking and informal target shooting, as well as small game hunting.
What is Blazer ammunition?
Blazer Brass ammo is CCI’s brass-cased line of ammunition. Their ammo is boxer-primed in a reloadable brass cartridge case. Blazer Brass loads are very similar to Speer Lawman ammunition which is predominantly used by the law enforcement community for range training.
What company owns CCI ammunition?
Vista Outdoor
Illinois Tool Works
CCI/Parent organizations
What is the best ammo casing?
Brass ammo is generally considered to be better than steel-cased ammo because it creates a better chamber seal than steel. Thus you have less blowback into the chamber and the receiver. Brass is better at this sealing action because it is more malleable than steel.
Is steel cased ammo really that bad?
Steel case ammo is cheaper to shoot and generally works well in most firearms, but does have some downsides. After all, saving 30 to 50 percent on your ammo over the course of thousands of rounds will certainly outweigh the cost of a new barrel, perhaps even the gun in some cases.
Is CCI ammo made in USA?
CCI (Cascade Cartridge Inc.), based in Lewiston, Idaho, manufactures rimfire ammunition, centerfire handgun ammunition, and primers for reloaders and industrial power loads. CCI made the first mini-mag rimfire ammunition in 1963, and in 1975 developed the Stinger, a high velocity .