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Brass Catcher for AR


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Posted

Anyone use one? Any recommendations? I'd like one that attaches to an acces. rail. I see Leave No Trace catchers but they look heavy and bulky despite being very well made.

Thanks in advance.

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Guest BenderBendingRodriguez
Posted
I just take a tarp with me.

What do you do when you feel like moving and shooting? Really big tarp?

Posted

Well, I want one for a possible upcoming training course. While I will be paying to be there, it's a bit much to ask for them to that accommodating. It could also interfere with others. I either have to find a useable catcher or accept that I may not make it home with all my brass :)

Posted
The thing to do at a training course is shoot cheap, steel case ammo and let it lie. There is not enough time to be worrying about brass.

This.

Posted
What do you do when you feel like moving and shooting? Really big tarp?

If I could move I wouldn't need to shoot.

Posted
The thing to do at a training course is shoot cheap, steel case ammo and let it lie. There is not enough time to be worrying about brass.

The last thing I want to do is start another long winded pointless debate over an un-resolvable issue. Suffice to say I don't, won't and never have put steel cased ammo in my AR's. You do spawn a reasonable solution and that's to just shoot all the mixed headstamp plinking brass I have stored. Use and and let it lie. I suppose worrying about the brass could/would distract me from paying attention to every detail.

Posted

Like I said, I don't want a debate over steel cased stuff and AR extractors, BUT my biggest beef with ANY steel cased stuff is It's too light. 99% of it is 55g. No thanks. I shed all my 55g stuff a few years ago along with the slower twist barrels. My main rifle is a 1/7 and I use a 75g HPBT. I've been really surprised at the difference. Maybe it's all in my head?

One thing about it, if I'm going to go to the time and expense of getting professional training, I'm thinking I should train with what I plan to utilize in the future. Besides, I keep piling this crap up, I should use some of it. I'm a diehard reloader though. I cringe at the thought of all that glorious brass on the ground.

Posted

I've got one of the UTG brass catchers that Garufa linked to. A gentleman here set me up with it a while back. It works okay, but the weight of the brass quickly causes it to rotate downward, then the brass just goes over the mouth of it. The most effective way to use it seems to be to unzip the bottom so the brass falls out. You still have to pick it up, but as long as you arent moving around it's all in a nice pile by your feet, instead of thrown several feet away.

I feel your pain leaving the brass laying, but I would do just that in a training class. The whole point is learning to use your weapon to stay alive, you need to be focused on learning and just chalk the cost of the brass up to being part of the deal. The instructors may not allow you to use a brass catcher on your rifle, anyway. Train like you fight probably wouldn't involve a brass catcher.

If you shoot the brass ammo, I'd forget about keeping the brass and focus on the class. They may let you pick it up afterwards, but it's not really that big of a deal. If you shoot 2,000 rounds, that's like $20-30 worth of brass? Not worth a lot of worry, considering the cost of most training classes.

Posted

I've got a UTG also. I fiddled with it and ended up with more on the ground than in the bag. Probably deserves a little more fiddling, but it's not an impressive setup for sure. I usually just use a big blue HF tarp.

Posted
I've got one of the UTG brass catchers that Garufa linked to. A gentleman here set me up with it a while back. It works okay, but the weight of the brass quickly causes it to rotate downward, then the brass just goes over the mouth of it. The most effective way to use it seems to be to unzip the bottom so the brass falls out. You still have to pick it up, but as long as you arent moving around it's all in a nice pile by your feet, instead of thrown several feet away.

I feel your pain leaving the brass laying, but I would do just that in a training class. The whole point is learning to use your weapon to stay alive, you need to be focused on learning and just chalk the cost of the brass up to being part of the deal. The instructors may not allow you to use a brass catcher on your rifle, anyway. Train like you fight probably wouldn't involve a brass catcher.

If you shoot the brass ammo, I'd forget about keeping the brass and focus on the class. They may let you pick it up afterwards, but it's not really that big of a deal. If you shoot 2,000 rounds, that's like $20-30 worth of brass? Not worth a lot of worry, considering the cost of most training classes.

Please let me know where to get 1000 to 2000 pieces of 5.56/223 brass for $20 to $30.

  • Admin Team
Posted

Most training classes I've been to have you police the range at the end of the day. Should be ample time to pick up your brass and then some if no one minds.

Also, I could see where a brass catcher might get in the way as you are learning some of the malfunction drills. I would really recommend taking full advantage of the class you're paying for and maybe not worrying too much about the few pieces of brass that get away from you.

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