A couple of observations...
First, I have never seen dings or cuts like that in commercially loaded ammunition--and that includes the dreaded do-not-reload AMERC brass.
Second, the poster above is right--I have NEVER seen a roll crimp on commercially loaded .45 ACP ammunition.
Third---well, it may be just me--but those bullets (the projectile itself) seems old and dull--like they have been sitting somewhere for a LONG time.
I don't think they have been cycled through a firearm--while the nicks are in the right place for a slide-into-the-cartridge jam (failure to feed, caused by weak springs), these kind of stoppages usually put a sizeable dent in the whole side of the case.
I do agree that there is something funny about those rounds.
First, I have never seen dings or cuts like that in commercially loaded ammunition--and that includes the dreaded do-not-reload AMERC brass.
Second, the poster above is right--I have NEVER seen a roll crimp on commercially loaded .45 ACP ammunition.
Third---well, it may be just me--but those bullets (the projectile itself) seems old and dull--like they have been sitting somewhere for a LONG time.
I don't think they have been cycled through a firearm--while the nicks are in the right place for a slide-into-the-cartridge jam (failure to feed, caused by weak springs), these kind of stoppages usually put a sizeable dent in the whole side of the case.
I do agree that there is something funny about those rounds.