I used red and black and the red was nearly gone—couldn’t see it until home. The black X was just like his. But we’ll see if these are a mistake.I use Sharpies. They come in more colors than black. Blue, red, green all work well.
Paint might work. However it might flake off as one pieces. It might interfere with chambering if the glob of paint is too big. I'm not saying you will have problems but those are the first things that come to mind.
My brass cleaning regiment is limited to hot soapy water, so all my brass is pretty tarnished and most has been shot many times. I've never ran into a problem identifying my brass even amongst other reloaders.
Circles, that was my next test.I circle my primers with a sharpie, red for magnum primers, blue for sub-sonic, purple for ladder loads, and color of the day for other loads with the proper notations in my journals to keep track of things. I also write the charge weights on the cases with the proper primer color to match the loads.
You must shoot with a different crowd than I do. That practice could be detrimental to daddy's health in some places.When I used to go to public ranges......basically, the other lanes had to be faster than my kids. Or they had to work a deal with my kids to get their brass back. My daughter was well trained to start crying on demand if somebody yelled at her for picking up their brass. It was glorious. I miss those days.
Yeah the family would be invited to leave.You must shoot with a different crowd than I do. That practice could be detrimental to daddy's health in some places.
You must shoot with a different crowd than I do. That practice could be detrimental to daddy's health in some places.
If they’re where I shoot, they are where kids are not allowed, past the line, and will be expelled by the owners of the indoor range; or, they’re trespassing on private property out in the boonies. Either way, not smartYou must shoot with a different crowd than I do. That practice could be detrimental to daddy's health in some places.