.308 ammo too expensive

I made plenty of research and decided to purchase a used Savage Arms Model 10 with heavy barrel chambered in .308 cal., with accutrigger and Burris scope. I am very happy with the rifle, specially because the price was a real bargain. It is accurate and works flawlessly. The only thing I failed to verify before making the investment was the cost of ammo and how it would limit my ability to practice on a regular basis at the range. Twenty rounds sell, when available, for $39.00 at most LGSs. This is too expensive and kind of disappointing... I am seriously considering trading it for a military surplus rifle like the German Mauser K98, a Swiss K31 or even a Mosin Nagant M39... The ammo for any of these proven military style rifles is cheaper and readily available. I have considered reloading, but I have not made my mind yet. Any suggestions?
 
Which model 10 did you get? I'm still saving my pennies for my next gun and I'm still liking the Savage Precision Carbine.

I was @ Dicks Sporting Goods yesterday and they had Fusion ammo in .308 for about $27 a box.
 
$2/round sounds pretty high - have you been paying that at your LGS for a while, or is it just "panic pricing"?

Midway seems to have a lot of name-brand stuff in that caliber in the $20-30 per 20 range. Of course, it's all out of stock now, but that's a temporary issue.
 
ammo price!!

Must be you are buying premium ammo. Buy a reloading kit for a few hundred and if you shoot at least once a weak it will pay for itself in a years time. Not to mention ammo tailored to your gun.
 
You should reload...

Before I started I only shot Federal Gold Medal Match out of my .308. For the most part it held 5 shot groups at .75 MOA out to 400 yards.... And I only paid $20/20 rounds. That is actually the common going price when you can find it in stock. Don't go paying $2/round to shoot your gun (especially if it isn't match ammo). Either reload, or wait a little for ammo to stay on the shelves...
 
That is the price you will pay for good ammo. I don't see the point in shooting cheap, inaccurate ammo in a target rifle.

In the long run you really need to reload. I can load REALLY accurate loads, using match bullets for around $8-$12 for 20 rounds. It will be made just for your rifle, be more accurate and you can probably get 50-100 fps more velocty than factory ammo.

Even with reloading I still shoot a target grade 22 with good ammo a lot more often, and for a lot less.
 
Just as others have said, reload! If you intend to shoot often you will either need deep pockets (money), or reloading equipment.
 
Why did you buy the rifle?
If you wanted target grade accuracy you should have expected premium ammunition would be expensive.

If you don't care as much about accuracy, a surplus rifle in a caliber that hasn't dried up MAY be cheaper, till that stuff does dry up.

In the long run, shooting any centerfire rifle with factory loads is going to be expensive, to some degree, sooner or later.

You can go with a cheap gun & hope surplus ammunition holds up, along with typically fair to mediocre accuracy, or you can stay with what you have and learn to reload for it, as others have suggested.
Denis
 
Reload is the only way to go. If you can find one of the old Lee Loaders and a bullet puller you can convert MILSUP into what is known as Camp Perry Match.

You simply pull the bullet and replace it with a quality slug. The Lee Loaders, if you can find them should run around 50 bucks.
 
You really should probably just dump that rifle that has such expensive tastes. :D

Seriously, you should decide to reload, if you can. Find a less expensive place than the LGS to buy your ammo, then reload that brass.

If you decide that doesn't work for you and it has a threaded barrel, shoot me a pm.
 
Quality .308 runs about $.90 - $1.20 / round if you buy it in case quantity (200 rounds). I've seen it as low as $.79 / round for military ammunition. One of the problems I've found in less expensive ammunition is the concentricity is awful, with it varying as much as 0.009" between rounds - that greatly degrades the accuracy. What that translates into is taking a 0.5 MOA rifle and making it into a 1.5 MOA rifle - just based on the concentricity variabilty from round-to-round.

So, you'll have to decide if you want to spend the money for quality factory ammunition, reload, or change calibers. Your choice.
 
Reloading isn't an option available to all...

If this is the case for you, search locally and online for cheaper ammo. Buy a couple of boxes of each until you find a couple that work well in your rifle--then buy what you can as you can while trying to buy from the same lot of ammo. Contrary to what nearly everyone here seems to believe your part of each shot still matters quite a lot (vs. the ammo).

The rifle's a good one; don't switch rifles just due to ammo pricing, which is bound to change in a year's time (who knows what will be cheap and what will be pricey then?).

I know more than a few folks who are surprised at the cost of (insert milsurp ammo caliber here) because "they just knew it'd always be dirt cheap." We don't "know" what milk will cost tomorrow; we can take educated/experience-based guesses, but we don't "know".

Ditto for reloading components folks.
 
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Walmart sells Federal 150 grain Power Shok .308 ammo for less than $15.00 / box of 20. This is good ammo that shoots well in my 308 AR.

Roger
 
Wow, I just did a search on Midway and Cabela's and did not know it was that bad.

Reloading is an option but getting supplies right now is tough. Also, reloading is not for everyone. If you are unsure you might pick up a reloading manual and read it to see if it's something you'd do enough to make it worth the cost. Be aware though if the reloading bug bites you, you're hooked for life:D
 
I would caution against thinking the 7.5x55 Swiss is a cheaper alternative, if you don't reload. True enough it'll use the same .308 diameter bullet, but that's also only an advantage to the reloader. It may be cheaper now but other than the K31, I can't think of another rifle in the US that uses the round. It's guarunteed to be more and more expensive as time goes on. I bought mine because, other than it's accuracy, I can use the same bullets I'd use for reloading my 30-06 and 308's.
Other than echoing the take up reloading chorus, the best advice I can offer is simply wait it out. 308 will get less expensive in the future.
 
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