The brass shells prevent a few problems. The live rounds are the big one for obvious reasons. We had a guy drop a bunch of live ones in a warehouse one time and then he ran them over with a
forklift. Thank god they were dummy rounds. Also, the nickel coated shells, aluminum shells and the steel shells cant be mixed in. Some yards may be doing business with a smelter that has a popper though. this is a big wheel used to sruch the live rounds before they hit the pot. Sometimes these yards will accept a small amount of nickel coated mixed in with the brass. Check around, you can make some good money off the brass shells. The range lead is also good if it is clean, meaning no rubber or dirt. It is ok to have the copper jacketed rounds mixed in as well. I pay from $.15-$.30/lb for range lead, and $.50-$1.25/lb on brass shells depending on the quality.
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