When I think about Lapua making 6 PPC shooters fire form their brass for 20 years rather than simply offering cases that fit out of the box, it actually bothers me a lot. I consider this poor customer service. This probably comes as a surprise to most of you, since after all, I mainly shoot a 30-30. The reason it bothers me is simple. Some of the best guys I have ever know are competition shooters, and I believe they should be accommodated better than Lapua is currently treating them. I shoot a 6 PPC on rare occasions, but would shoot it a little more often if Lapua would really get in the game. I'm asking as many shooters as possible to send a message to Lapua in the feedback section of their website. Another thing you can do is use Norma brass until they fix their problems. Below is a link to their feedback, and a letter that I just sent. I'm not real good at writing letters in a professional way, but maybe it will serve as a guide for some who are more creative writers.
http://www.lapua.com/en/resources/contact.html
I'm writing you because of some valid complaints that the 6 PPC shooters have. First of all, I feel that they have not been accommodated very well when it comes to short range benchrest. You can say that you have been supplying 220 Russian brass of excellent quality for years, but I ask "who shoots the 220 Russian in short range benchrest competition". I personally do not know of any that do. The majority (99.9%) of all short range benchrest shooters use the 6 PPC. Why do you bring the brass down to 220 Russian knowing that the end user will have to fireform the brass to make the 6 PPC? You have been quick to make calibers like the 6.5 Creedmoor, 6.5 Grendel, 6mm BR Norma, 6.5X47 Lapua, 300 AAC Blackout, but when it comes to the most used short range benchrest caliber, you have not taken care of your customers. You would only need to change the neck and body form dies, and the headstamp. Why is that too much to ask?
Another compaint is the brass alloy is softer in the new blue box. The older gold box brass was harder. Recent testing has shown evidence of 25% zinc instead of 36% zinc in the older brass. I realize it is easier to draw softer brass, but the shooters are complaining of the newer 220 Russian brass not shooting the hotter loads. I realize they could back the loads down, but many shooters aren't seeing the same accuracy with the lighter loads. Some have felt that the "Lapua advantage" is now outweighed by the ease of using Norma 6 PPC brass. Especially since the higher pressure advantage of the Lapua brass is no longer there.
I believe the best thing for shooters to do at this time is use Norma 6 PPC brass until Lapua starts making 6 PPC brass. The Norma brass has proven itself as a quality product, that will handle loads of equal pressure to the current Lapua offering. This letter was not written to upset you in any way. Just simply to explain to you how I, and other shooters are starting to feel.
Michael