How it All Got Started

"Necessity is the Mother of all Inventions"... Plato

AMMO BOXES

I shoot a lot of 7.62 X 51...

To save money, I purchase imported surplus, which seems to be not only dependable, but also reasonably priced.

As I'm sure you're aware, although this ammo usually looks pretty good, because it's older, the bags or boxes in which it's packed come apart with age.

For some time, I’d been trying to find a way to re-box this ammo and couldn't find a decent option. New boxes are available, however, they’re large with styrofoam or plastic inserts. At one Big Name Catalog Seller, 20-round rifle ammo boxes with inserts are $1.25 each plus shipping... too much for me!

NOTE: REPACKBOX® offers 30 BOX PISTOL CALIBER KITS, 30 BOX RIFLE CALIBER KITS, 100 BOX PISTOL CALIBER BUNDLES, and 100 BOX RIFLE CALIBER BUNDLES of Ammo Boxes for as low as $.24 each!

To address these issues, I figured the best way to solve it was to make a compact, 20 Round 7.62 X 51 cardboard ammo box where one box fills one mag. Having experience in making other types of boxes, I jumped into the project with great enthusiasm... the rest is history.

FAST LOADING TRAYS

Thank goodness for the $5.00 movie bin at Walmart. As it seems, the best time for me to re-box ammo is while watching a movie. Although filling boxes with ammo is a benign thing for me, my monthly movie budget began to top out.

So I begin to think, there's got to be a faster way to load these boxes. While I won't EVEN share my embarrassing first "non-solution", the correct way to do it finally popped into my head. Thus tour now Patented... FAST LOADING TRAY was invented.

With two hands, all you do is fill the tray, place the open box over the tray, then flip the tray and the ammo slips into the box. So far, my best time with 50 rounds of 9MM is 21 seconds.

 

rusty food cans

FOOD STORAGE

Not too long ago, several friends got together for dinner, where we ended up talking about "Being Prepared". One of the major topics discussed revolved around what kind of and how much food to store. The consensus was that freeze-dried or dehydrated food, although expensive, was the best way to go.

The host for the evening, who was somewhat prepared because of his concern over Y2K, took us to his basement so we could see some of his preps. His food consisted of several 6-can cases of "name brand" freeze-dried entrees.

Being nosy, I asked if we could open up a case to see how well the cans had survived some 13+ years. Much to the dismay of the Host, 4 of the 6 cans in the case had severe rust around the top and bottom.

Of the 4 cans, 1 had actually rusted thru to expose the contents to the elements. To see how bad the damage might be, we opened it up and "whew"... what a mess!

HERE'S THE PROBLEM... Corrugated box board is HYGROSCOPIC... in other words, it Absorbs and Holds Moisture!

This is why the tops and bottoms of the cans had rusted yet, the box holding them didn't show any sign of being wet. FWIW... had neither the dinner taken place nor the cans examined, in a future emergency, the Host would have been totally "SOL".

After the discovery, the rest of the evening's conversation was about what could be done to protect one's VERY expensive preps... thus the birth of FOOD STORAGE.