July 11, 2012
By Marco Vorobiev
Marco Vorobiev was a member of the elite Soviet Spetsnaz in Afghanistan in the 1980s. He's a U.S. citizen now and conducts training courses that draw on his special forces training. He'll have a new installment every Wednesday.
As we toured the Barnaul Cartridge Plant during our recent trip to Russian, the good folk at there introduced several new additions to their product line bound for the American market. Last week I mentioned two new steel-cased loads for the.45 ACP that will become available stateside shortly.
Another new steel-case cartridge that would be bound shortly for our shores is the zinc-coated 9mm Kurz or .380. Though the new .380 cartridge was good news, especially in view of recent .380 ammo popularity with subcompact handguns and resulting ammo shortages, nothing was more exciting that to look at, touch and witness testing of steel-cased 6.5 Grendel ammunition. It was like witnessing a birth.
At last reasonably priced steel-cased 6.5 Grendel will be coming to the USA. I have to slow down a notch here as what we saw was pre-production prototypes. However, the Barnaul Testing Facility's personnel fired several rounds though the ballistic barrel stand. The accuracy at 100 meters was OK, but not what you would expect from the Grendel round, but it was still within Russian military set parameters. And as the development of the final production round continues, we should see reasonably priced high quality 6.5 Grendel ammo stateside very soon.
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Zinc-coated steel-cased .380 ammunition Zinc-coated steel-cased .380 ammunition will be coming to America soon, manufactured in Siberia by Barnaul and distributed through Wolf Performance Ammunition.
Steel-cased 6.5 Grendel The most exciting new round that the Barnaul Cartridge Plant is working on is a steel-cased 6.5 Grendel. Vorobiev saw several pre-production prototypes while there.
Ammo in pressure gun Vorobiev watched as several rounds of steel case 6.5 Grendel ammo were fired through a pressure gun. An economical load will greatly help the Grendel's popularity.
Test-firing Ballistic data from test-firing the steel-cased Grendel prototype was compared to the ammo samples sourced from overseas. Vorobiev says accuracy still needs some work.