The real bugger is I cannot upload a decent image of my lot Dave, I will send you a copy.
You can zoom in and look at them easily.
I am not anti polishing, but some need preserving as they are (for example, I have one that was given to me that had clearly been through the war, I kept it as was), a new Lapua with that lovely annealing should stay as it is as well.
Likewise, some of the military stuff will have coloured annulus and tips that are easy to destroy if polished.
I did hear that a light polish with bronze wool was an accepted way to take bad grunge off of a case.
The pulled round is a bit of a conundrum.
Do you drill a small hole near the base, leave the bullet out (actually a good idea as it shows the bullet form as well) or leave it whole less powder with an oiled primer?
I like to prove mine safe, but some of the real oldies wont get drilled.
A solution I saw at Warminster was to label each round with a small watch makers label (On a piece of cotton) with a dab of PVA or tied round the rim.
Don't use glue or gum as it does the brass in, PVA is water based and easy to peel off.
I also like mine to be handled, I am going to try Davids suggestion of hairspray as it can be removed if needs be.
Its a fascinating thing, you cannot collect several hundreds of rifles easily, but you can collect many thousands of cartridges without a licence.
Many of these spawned or enabled the design of rifles that were built to serve the bullet and not the other way round.
The bullet is the weapon if you like (sorry, but that is what a vast majority of them were designed for and I make no apology for using the word as it is important in context) the rifle is merely a launcher.
So the cartridge is usually the egg and not the chicken.
I tend to keep doubles, or a loaded case and a separate bullet if I can, the rest go in a box of spares to hand on.
It is not a very big box though.
Having the collectors ticket has helped in so much as folk who would previously not have bothered have given me things that are really worth having (Boys ATK being one) that I could not have held previously.
I don't like paying for bullets, not because I am tight (I have paid and I will if needs be) but having collected since a kid of about 7 (I still have the original head of a .303 dug up by a mate) where and how you find them, and their provenance is what really matters.
I wont be selling mine on and I don't sell any on, I give away if I have spares, the plan is if I snuff it they either go to another collector, a museum, or go to my step son. To me the worth is in the design and diversity of their purpose and not financial.
While we are at it, a huge thanks to anyone here who has given me the odd bullet of twenty, all appreciated more than you realise.
Jees what a saddo!! :lol: